Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com!
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Newly Diagnosed Celiac Here :)


Shannonlass

Recommended Posts

Shannonlass Apprentice

Hey everyone,

I'm a newby here. Just found out a few days ago I'm a celiac. Gluten antibody levels in my blood tests were sky high. Had an endoscopy last Tuesday and will have results of that in about 8 days time. Consultant told me to start preparing and reading up on a gluten-free diet as he is pretty sure my samples will confirm it. I am still pretty devastated to be honest. I was a real wheat-a-holic. All my favorite foods are loaded with gluten. It's going to be a real challenge.

My question is, how will I know if I am doing the diet right apart from alleviation of symptoms? Will I start having violent reactions to any gluten I do ingest? Will my consultant be calling me back in a few months to check my antibody levels to see if they have gone down? I want to do this right. I've been suffering from various aliments for 12-14 years, all related to this condition I see now. I want to feel what 'well' feels like. I think I've forgotten.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Mskedi Newbie

People react differently to accidental glutenings, but the trend does seem to be that the longer you're gluten-free, the more acute the reaction. That is definitely the case for me -- I had mild GI symptoms pre-gluten-free (but I suffered other symptoms that were pretty awful, including extreme insomnia); post gluten-free, though, the slightest ingestion of gluten has me in pain and trapped in the bathroom for anywhere from 1-4 days. As annoying as that is, I kind of like that the reaction has gotten stronger because it has completely curbed any desire to cheat. It also has destroyed my desire for forbidden foods like "real" bread. My favorite foods were loaded with gluten as well, but I have new favorite foods now that are equally satisfying -- actually, more satisfying because they taste great and don't make me ill. There are some aspects of eating gluten that I miss -- most notably, being able to eat anywhere or to order out of several choices from a menu -- but the food itself I can honestly say I no longer miss.

Even without that GI deterrent, the improved quality of life is enough to keep me on the diet. You mentioned 12-14 years of suffering -- I'm sure the memory of that will help you stick with it. I'd forgotten what "well" felt like, too, but now that I feel it again, I'm never, ever going to do anything to intentionally give it up.

I can't tell you the procedures your doctor will follow, but I know for my grandmother and cousin they did do second biopsies later to check for improvement. My sister was diagnosed based on the blood test alone (her numbers were sky high as well), and I self-diagnosed and was lucky enough to have a doctor who believed me based on my symptom improvement and my family history. With the exception of my sister, we've all had negative blood tests, which is why I think for my cousin and grandmother they did second biopsies rather than second blood tests. Maybe they'll be able to be less invasive for you since you had a positive blood test. Or maybe your description of symptom improvement will be enough for your doctor, as it is for mine.

Whatever path your doctor chooses for checking up on you, I hope you feel relief soon. This site is an excellent resource for recipes, meal-planning, tips to avoid cross-contamination, etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Shannonlass Apprentice

Thank you for taking the time to reply to me. At the moment it's trying to work out what I can and can't have is the most confusing. Nutritionally I was very clued in before this so reading labels is not proving difficult. I am pretty worried about cross contamination though. My husband has decided to go gluten free as well. The only things we have in the house that contain gluten are the last few half bags of pasta and half a slice pan. Once that is finished we are almost gluten free.

I want to get started as soon as possible. How long before you 'got it right' and started to feel better?

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Reba32 Rookie

you will likely start to feel better immediately. Within a day or so of being gluten free, you should notice a difference. Within a week you should noticed a marked difference. Within a couple or few months, give or take, you should be at about the point where you go "Holy $#@%! This is what healthy feels like!".

Every day will get better and better. At first you might want to just stick with whole natural foods, rather than packaged and manufactured foods while your insides are healing.

I first went gluten free in 2008, then did a gluten challenge at the end of last year to get the positive medical diagnosis rather than my own self diagnosis. The gluten challenge was a painful, living hell. I've been gluten free, again, since December 14th. I've had a couple instances of cross contamination, which happens. And the others are correct, the longer you go without gluten, the stronger your reaction will be when you do accidently, or deliberately, eat gluten. All you have to do is remember how crappy you feel right now, and it is unlikely that you will knowlingly gluten yourself. Accidents happen though.

You're lucky your husband is supportive of you and that you can have an entirely gluten free home. Some of us are living in "mixed" homes, which makes it that much more difficult!

Link to comment
Share on other sites
mushroom Proficient

Be sure to check all your medications and OTC supplements for gluten too. The meds will not tell you on the bottle, you will have to check online or with the pharmacist (or the manufacturer if you know it) for that information. Most supplements are labelling quite well now. Also check all your toiletries and personal care products; you will be amazed where gluten is lurking. :blink: Think lip gloss, toothpaste especially, but lots of people react to hair products and hand lotion is problematic because we handle food all the time. I assume you have bought new toaster, colander, wooden and plastic utensils which are hard to clean of gluten, tossed scratched non-stick pans, reseasoned cast iron after putting it through a cleaning cycle in the oven.

Good wishes on feeling better. :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites
kbug Newbie

It's so true. It is overwhelming... I just found out I am a celiac, and it's hard news to really realize and grasp. And it's difficult to eat ANYTHING with anyone else. (Food really is a social thing!) It took me three days to notice a difference. My whole body started to work again, all of it! Within two weeks I felt like I had died and gone to heaven with no aches or pains, and this was after four years. I was lucky and found out early in life; some people don't find out for decades. Reba32 is right, when I eat gluten now my reaction is much more severe.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
T.H. Community Regular

I hope you start to feel better right away! It's definitely a bit overwhelming at first, with the learning curve, but it slowly improves. I'm on it 7 months now, and it's much easier to figure out what I can and can't eat, and recipes for that.

One thing I'd add to what everyone else has said is that you want to make sure you have a good GI doc and a good celiac friendly general doctor. There's a number of things that 'go along' with celiac, and if you don't have a good doctor, they can go undiagnosed. Like other food allergies, testing you later again for celiac to make sure you're body is healing right, etc...

Also, it's not a bad idea to look for 'odd' lists of things that have gluten. Here's a few that got to me:

You can get glutened from the chapstick (or toothpaste, or whatever) that your partner uses, if you kiss him. So having him go gluten free like you mentioned is wonderful, he'll just need to brush his teeth special if he eats gluten away from home some days.

Tea bags are often sealed with gluten, and gluten is in dry wall as well, so some construction areas can be 'gluten rich' if there's a lot of that dust around. Shampoo can be an issue, too, as whenever the soap suds are rinsed off, if any get in your mouth, you can react.

Depending on how sensitive you are (and that seems to vary a bit, from what I've read), you might react to gluten in your detergents, too. Detergent washes the dishes, then your food touches the dishes, and there you go, glutened. I think most people I know who run into this, however, have something that isn't rinsing as well as it should. or detergent washes the towels that dry the dishes, and so on.

I'd suggest reading up on what to look for if you go out to eat, if that's something you do. I ended up having to do that before I finally stopped reacting to restaurant foods. There's unexpected ways to get glutened there. Sometimes food comes 'pre-seasoned' to the restaurant, in ways that contaminate it with gluten. And unless you ask about that specifically, many restaurant employees won't consider that when they are telling you what is in the food. :-)

Good luck to you!

Shauna

Hey everyone,

I'm a newby here. Just found out a few days ago I'm a celiac. Gluten antibody levels in my blood tests were sky high. Had an endoscopy last Tuesday and will have results of that in about 8 days time. Consultant told me to start preparing and reading up on a gluten-free diet as he is pretty sure my samples will confirm it. I am still pretty devastated to be honest. I was a real wheat-a-holic. All my favorite foods are loaded with gluten. It's going to be a real challenge.

My question is, how will I know if I am doing the diet right apart from alleviation of symptoms? Will I start having violent reactions to any gluten I do ingest? Will my consultant be calling me back in a few months to check my antibody levels to see if they have gone down? I want to do this right. I've been suffering from various aliments for 12-14 years, all related to this condition I see now. I want to feel what 'well' feels like. I think I've forgotten.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



virginiagl Apprentice

I'm in the same boat you are. I just found out about my intolerances which include gluten(haven't had an endoscopy yet)and I'm overwhelmed by it all too. I have known about this for a couple of months now and I am still learning a lot of stuff I didn't know. Even as careful as I have been, I am willing to bet that I am not totally gluten free yet.

I thought I only had to be careful of the food I eat...now I am finding out that it goes way beyond food! I am trusting all the seasoned folks here though that it will get better. They are living proof it will...but for now yes it is hard to take in and there are a lot of emotional things to deal with too. Just think how lucky we are to finally know what is going on in our bodies and to have a website to go to for support and knowledge. My heart goes out to you. Good luck!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - plumbago replied to Suzi374's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      Lots of tests

    2. - trents replied to Suzi374's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      Lots of tests

    3. - Suzi374 replied to Suzi374's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      Lots of tests

    4. - Suzi374 posted a topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      Lots of tests

    5. - Peace lily posted a topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      0

      Would like to gain weight


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      121,224
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Suzi374
    Newest Member
    Suzi374
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • plumbago
      I'm also a nurse, but one who has worked in chronic care, and to some extent, it is more satisfying to see patients through to a diagnosis (as opposed to working in the ED), but an accurate diagnosis does not occur not as often as it should! Your posting presents a lot of information. But a couple of things I can respond to. One, celiac disease is diagnosed by endoscopy and biopsy of the duodenum. So, pathology will need to weigh in. It's not diagnosed on gastroscopy. (At least, not as far as I know). Two, did you get blood tests for celiac disease? You will need to be eating gluten in order for those to be accurate. Three, where was the CT angiogram (of what)? I could go on and on, but thought I'd start there.
    • trents
      Was a biopsy done when you had your gastroscopy? Concerning your anemia, are you B12 deficient? It's nearly impossible to get sufficient B12 if you are a vegetarian unless you take supplements.
    • Suzi374
      And I’m anaemic, however I’m also female and vegetarian. I had an iron trans a couple of years ago however it’s starting to dwindle and taking supplements doesn’t seem to work. I can’t seem to absorb it. 
    • Suzi374
      Hi, I attended a neurologist appt last Tuesday, which I nearly cancelled, due to ongoing numbness and tingling in toes to mid foot. One of the first things he asked was ‘are you celiac’. I’m not. He thought all reflexes were ok but at the last minute decided on nerve conduction tests which were low normal. He was a little confused as he felt they should be better and tried a new set of probs, all the time, giving me multiple shocks which were not enjoyable lol. Anyway, he’s now ordered tests for myeloma, and all the vitaminy things that so many of you mention on here, also tests looking for autoimmune responses. I already have Hashimotos. Interestingly, to me, but maybe someone out there can relate or knows more than i do, although I was a nurse, but ED not ‘weird symptoms’  nurse. Anyway back to the interesting thing, I took duramine in 2013 to lose weight which caused a massive panic attack when I stopped taking it and half my hair fell out. I only took it for a week but it was horrible and I regret it. It triggered ongoing panic attacks which are horrendous. So I feel like I’m a bit crazy. Then in 2020 I had this sudden onset of horrible pain when trying to eat a cinnamon roll. It continued and I lost around 20 kgs. I had two gastroscopes and a colonoscopy and they were all normal. I scored a barium swallow and CT angiogram. All normal. The pain subsided a little but I was left with reflux and an awful feeling that I couldn’t get air when I ate some foods. This was not anxiety.  The anxiety was separate and I still maintain this. This was something to do with eating. It was like the air was thick but I wasn’t short of breath. I just had the sensation I was, then it triggered anxiety. Anyway, I had other weird things- couldn’t bend knees to shave legs in shower lol. Knees felt stiff and swollen but they weren’t. Knee WOUld swell up randomly but mri showed minimal issues. A bit of a meniscus degeneration but insignificant. Then the buzzing sensations in my head, the feeling like someone was stabbing me with something sharp. So now, I pre empted his tests, although I don’t think I’m celiac because it should have come up on gastroscopy, I’ve gone off gluten. Since Tuesday last week so 9 days. Since then I don’t appear to be as constipated, I realised I got through today without a nap and I’m not tired, maybe it’s just today and not related but I get very tired normally and sleep straight after work often, I can bend my knees and shave my legs lol, the buzzing vibrating has gone from my head, I had to call and ambulance as my heart decided we were off on a run, but we weren’t running and I’ve been a bit twitchy at bed time when trying to sleep, reflux is improving, I did get the weird suffocating feeling a bit when eating today but not as bad normall. Tingling and numbness still present and I felt like it moved up my legs a bit today but I’m a bit jittery. So I don’t know if it’s celiac disease or a gluten intolerance but I think, and it may be wishful thinking because my symptoms do make life a bit challenging, but maybe I’m feeling better. I don’t feel as cloudy. My thinking feels crisper. Like there’s no buzzing and I’m not fighting to break through the cloudiness now. I hope so much that this may help me feel a bit better moving forward. It would be a miracle as I really have struggled to work and parent and keep the house clean and I’m always anxious and exhausted.  If you get this far, please tell me if you you can relate to any of the above. Oh and tonsils out 5 years ago but before that antibiotics multiple times a year, sometimes intramuscular because they were so bad.  Op was meant to take 30 mins, it took 1.5 hours due to size of them. 
    • Peace lily
      Im still not gaining weight I’m on a gluten free diet . And still having issues with constapation started priobiocs figured it would help been over two weeks . I guess it’s going to be a long road for me .
×
×
  • Create New...