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How Sensitive Are You?


T.H.

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T.H. Community Regular

I thought it might be nice to have a brief roll call of sensitivity, as it were. If a product is recommended, or recommended against, it makes it so much easier to know how that can relate to my own life if I know whether the person posting is about the same level of sensitivity as me, or more, or less, if that makes sense? Thought it might help everyone else the same way. :)

Soooo...

My daughter seems to be able to eat somewhere between 5ppm-10ppm, at a guess. Although how that translates on a day to day basis, I'm not really sure. If she eats products that are tested to 5ppm or less, she's usually okay if she only has one serving. The brand products that are <10ppm sometimes she's okay with, sometimes not, so we're not really certain where the exact cutoff is.

Me, best guess is that I react to less than 5ppm. The few times I've found a product that was tested at 5ppm or less, and didn't contain my allergic foods, I still got a gluten reaction. Still investigating, but that's what it's looking like so far.

Anyone else wanna jump in and share their own? If you don't know, probably brands that you can eat would do fine, yeah? Like, Udi's tests to 10ppm or less, but Pamela's to 5ppm or less, for example.

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dilettantesteph Collaborator

Both my son and I unfortunately seem to react to gluten below 5 ppm. This is based on reported company testing of products.

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potatopeelingmom Newbie

I thought it might be nice to have a brief roll call of sensitivity, as it were. If a product is recommended, or recommended against, it makes it so much easier to know how that can relate to my own life if I know whether the person posting is about the same level of sensitivity as me, or more, or less, if that makes sense? Thought it might help everyone else the same way. :)

Soooo...

My daughter seems to be able to eat somewhere between 5ppm-10ppm, at a guess. Although how that translates on a day to day basis, I'm not really sure. If she eats products that are tested to 5ppm or less, she's usually okay if she only has one serving. The brand products that are <10ppm sometimes she's okay with, sometimes not, so we're not really certain where the exact cutoff is.

Me, best guess is that I react to less than 5ppm. The few times I've found a product that was tested at 5ppm or less, and didn't contain my allergic foods, I still got a gluten reaction. Still investigating, but that's what it's looking like so far.

Anyone else wanna jump in and share their own? If you don't know, probably brands that you can eat would do fine, yeah? Like, Udi's tests to 10ppm or less, but Pamela's to 5ppm or less, for example.

My son and I both react to 10 ppm or higher. I am very picky about which companies we purchase from. It has to be manufactured in their own "wheat free" factory and test at the lowest level. I purchased a vita mix with the dry bucket and now make my own Lundburg rice flours. Also El Peto is good for the other flours.

Take care,

Monica

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jerseyangel Proficient

For myself, I don't think in terms of PPM. I know that I do best on whole, naturally gluten-free foods. The packaged foods I do use are from companies like Gluten Free Pantry and Glutino where they are processed in dedicated conditions. I have problems with spices, so I use fresh onion and garlic. I can use plain frozen veggies now and then without issue.

I need to use gluten-free topical products also.

I'll be gluten-free for 6 years this summer and remain very sensitive but my reactions are much shorter and don't happen very often since I got a handle on what I can and can't tolerate.

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T.H. Community Regular

I need to use gluten-free topical products also.

Any recommendations on these? We've been looking for some, especially as I have a minor wheat allergy, too, but having a difficult time finding good ones, to date.

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dilettantesteph Collaborator

For myself, I don't think in terms of PPM.

Good point. PPM is a concentration so it depends on how much of it you eat. How many years did it take you to get to a completely safe diet?

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jerseyangel Proficient

Any recommendations on these? We've been looking for some, especially as I have a minor wheat allergy, too, but having a difficult time finding good ones, to date.

For hair I use Giovanni, Garnier, and Alterna. I have yet to find a Giovanni or Garnier hair product with gluten and Alterna has several but read labels carefully. They have a new "Organic" line where they actually state "gluten-free" on the front of the container if it is so.

I also like shampoo bars from Chagrin Valley and soaps from the Soap Shed because they both offer bars that don't contain coconut which I am sensitive to. Also good if you don't want lot of additives. Neither company is gluten-free, so read ingredients.

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I use Dove Sensitive Deodorant--used to use a crystal but after a few years they begn to irritate my skin pretty badly.

Make up--Everyday Minerals foundation, Nars Blush, Smashbox shadows, Loreal Million Lashes Mascara, Burts Bees Lip Shimmers, Afterglow Cosmetics Lipsticks.

Good point. PPM is a concentration so it depends on how much of it you eat. How many years did it take you to get to a completely safe diet?

I would say close to 3 years, and even after that there were things like nuts that I still needed to cut. I think I played catch-up with myself for a long time--identifying a problem and cutting it out, only to relapse and have to do it all again with the next thing. At the beginning, I made the classic "super sensitive" mistake of thinking that I could eat anything as long as it was labelled gluten-free! It's been the last year and a half or so that I can truly say I'm on an even keel. As long as I stay with what I know is safe for me and don't try new things (unless it's one at a time and watch carefully after repeated ingestion), I'm doing ok.

I have a few other intolerances too, so that was a part of the process. Along the way I saw 2 allergists, and 3 gastroenterologists.

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T.H. Community Regular

Thank you for the recs! I'll have to go hunt these down and check 'em out. I managed to find Afterglow for the one lipgloss I own now...which I never get to use as it somehow ends up in my daughter's bathroom more than mine, LOL.

shauna

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ecf Rookie

Hi Shauna,

For hair I use Neutrogena Shampoo Anti-Residue Formula (although I don't love it, just haven't been able to find anything else that works for me) and Neutrogena Clean Replenishing Conditioner.

Soap: Dove Unscented Beauty Bar

Moisturizers: Neutrogena Oil-Free Moisturizer for my face, and plain old Vaseline rubbed in well for everything else

Chapstick: Carmex

Make up: all Nars, which is supposedly a completely gluten free line

Emily

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  • 3 weeks later...
Mago Newbie

I've only been gluten-free for 2 months, and I'm really trying to guage my sensitivity. My bloodwork came back negative, and I was told by my doctor that I'm not celiac, and that the gluten-free diet is working fine so assume I'm just intolerant. On Tuesday, I took my boyfriend out to dinner for his birthday, and my "gluten-free"-salad came with croutons on it. I got the waiter to take it back to the kitchen, but they might've only picked off the croutons. I had acute abdomen pain 20 min. later and have been extremely nauseous/bloated/backed up for the past 5 days from what seems to be only cross-contamination. I also have noticed that my "oat essence" hand cream is causing me problems when I touch my face at all.

Basically, I'm getting more questions than answers from all this. Firstly, is it possible to be extremely gluten sensitive and either not celiac or have a negative diagnosis? (I was tested for IgA, possibly IgG, iron and something thyroid-related) Secondly, when you're talking about the ppm's/high sensitivity, would simple cross-contamination be a very high dose for extremely sensitive? Finally, is it normal for the symptom length to vary based on level of exposure? This is my first post, so I hope I'm putting it in an appropriate discussion. :)

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T.H. Community Regular

Firstly, is it possible to be extremely gluten sensitive and either not celiac or have a negative diagnosis? (I was tested for IgA, possibly IgG, iron and something thyroid-related)

I believe so, yeah. I had a diagnosis, but I know a number of sensitive folk who don't, and I believe some of them were negative, yes. But we'll have to wait for them to chime in to make sure. :)

Secondly, when you're talking about the ppm's/high sensitivity, would simple cross-contamination be a very high dose for extremely sensitive?

Cross contamination seems to be able to really zap some folks who are moderately sensitive, oh yeah. How high the 'dose' is really kind of depends on the person, far as I can tell. It's kind of funny. Celiacs are told to avoid cross contamination very vigorously, and yet at the same time, a lot of experts then say that we can have X mg a day and be all right.

But many people I know can consume gluten once, in such a small amount it's invisible to the naked eye, and they are still having a reaction. And that's WAY lower than the Xmg a day that is supposed to be safe. I think if you react to the crutons having touched your food, though, it's probably a good sign that you're on the sensitive side.

A friend's toddler just did something similar, where he shared a straw twice with someone who was eating gluten at the time and he was sick for 2 days. The crutons probably had more gluten than that, I would imagine.

Finally, is it normal for the symptom length to vary based on level of exposure?

It seems to differ from person to person. Gut symptoms are often a week or less, I think (I don't get these, so that's just my faulty memory at work here. :D ). Neuro symptoms and the DH rash can take weeks to dissipate, in some. The amount of gluten for most of us does seem to have some type of increase, but I've seen some where the intensity of the reaction was what went up, and I've seen some where the length of time of the reaction increased, and some with both.

But one thing that does seem very common is that as you stay gluten free, you may react to less gluten, and you tend to have a stronger reaction to it, as well.

So sorry you got zapped, though! It's never a fun time. :(

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Mago Newbie

Shauna, thanks for your post, it really helps a lot! I guess only time will tell to see if I have to go the de-contamination route. :)

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ecf Rookie

Hi Mago,

It is definitely possible to have a gluten sensitivity (and be very sensitive at that), but not Celiac. I was negative for Celiac but diagnosed with gluten sensitivity three years ago (after over a year of being very ill) and am very sensitive to cross-contamination. There is still a lot of research to be done on gluten sensitivity and how it differs from Celiac, but a major new study just came out:

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I would say that just removing croutons from a salad would be a pretty serious cross-contamination threat. I think the crumbs that were inevitably left behind would be enough to cause a reaction for both Celiacs and gluten sensitive people who react easily. Say bread had been cut on a prep surface in the kitchen, the crumbs were wiped off but the surface was not washed down with soap and water, and then your salad was prepared on it - even that might be enough to set off a reaction. In your case the crumbs were still probably sitting in the salad - yikes!

My gluten reactions are pretty consistent, in that they always last 3 days and include gastro issues, fatigue, headaches, muscle pain and brain fog. But the symptoms do seem to be more or less severe based on how much gluten I may have accidentally consumed. i.e. if it was a larger amount, I'll probably be spending more time in the bathroom and the fatigue will be more debilitating over those 3 days, etc.

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Mago Newbie

Oh wow, thanks ecf. Its pretty reassuring to know where these symptoms might come from. I got the impression from my doctor that if wasn't celiac disease then I have nothing that they could help me with/was medically recognized. Luckily I haven't had too many cc problems so far.

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ecf Rookie

You're welcome Mago! The grey area of gluten sensitivity can be really frustrating, but don't let your doctor convince you that it isn't a real condition, because the medical community is just starting to figure it out. From what I understand, many doctors are not even aware of it yet or are not willing to deal with it because the research is so new. Peter Green at the Celiac Disease Center at Columbia is definitely one of the people leading the way on starting to broach the subject of gluten sensitivity. He goes into some depth about it in a talk he gave recently:

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The video is pretty long, but it is definitely worth at least listening to the parts on gluten sensitivity.

And coincidentally, I'm going to hear him speak in NYC tonight. Will pass along anything new he might have to add.

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brendab Contributor

This is a good thread to read through, although I don't understand the numbers in the first several posts. I am normally off of gluten but I fall and become instantly addicted before I jump back on the gluten free wagon and within 20 min. I have stomach pain followed by gas cramps and terrible smelling gas. (sorry, had to go there) I also get neuro. symptoms as well with the two worst being severe fatigue and ADD.

Well, back on the wagon I go!

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GFinDC Veteran

Quote How Sensitive Are You? Helping each other out End Quote

I tear-up sometimes watching sappy movies. Ooops, prolly not what you meant! :)

I stay with mostly whole foods, so I don't know how sensitive I am now really. There are not a lot of processed foods I could eat anyway due to my other food intolerances. I used to think I was very sensitive, before I eliminated all my other food intolerances. Basically anything was problem when I was sick and my gut was already irritated.

Nowadays I am still careful about what I eat, and seldom go out to restaraunts. I have a gluten free house, and my cat (Muffin) has gluten free food and treats now.

I do use Barbasol shaving cream, and home made soap that my cousin makes.

I don't try new processed foods very often, but mainly stick with things that I already know work for me.

So far frozen veggies are ok for me, and I seldom have any problem with canned veggies except for some beans. But I don't think that is gluten, just a reaction to the beans themselves.

I do avoid foods that are processed on shared equipment most of the time. I also avoid things that make me sick, whether they are gluten-free or not, or made on shared equipment or not, or are organic and healthy or not.

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  • 1 year later...
BumbleBee91 Newbie

This is my first time posting so hopefully I'e got this in the right place.

I've been diagnosed coeliac disease since Sept 2011 and been gluten-free since about Nov 2011 (didn't have the knowledge of a true gluten-free diet beforehand). Im still getting symptoms every so often though and reading through this it made me think that maybe Im reacting to products labelled gluten-free which aren't really, are you saying that a product can be labelled gluten-free but may still have some small amount of gluten that I could react to? I thought gluten-free would immediately mean that it is and has been tested and is also made in a factory that is gluten-free? And how did you all find out that you're sensitive to less than 5ppm etc?

Thanks

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dilettantesteph Collaborator

It is a matter of trial and error. Keeping a journal with what you eat and how you feel can be very helpful. It can reveal other food intolerances as well as trace gluten issues. I try to only add one new food a week so that I can more easily tell what has bothered me if I do have a reaction.

Good luck.

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MrsVJW Newbie

I also have noticed that my "oat essence" hand cream is causing me problems when I touch my face at all.

If it's an allergy reaction, you may also have issues with oats. My issues are allergy-related, and I have problems with even the certified gluten-free oats and oat flours. However, if it is a gluten-free facility that also produces oats and oat flours, it's not as big of a deal for me.

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Bubba's Mom Enthusiast

I'd say I'm very sensitive. I've had reactions to lunchmeat sliced on a machine that looked clean, and from fruit cut up on an all purpose cutting board. I don't eat any gluten-free replacement type foods, like bread. I stick to a mostly whole foods diet.

I don't eat anything that says it's made on shared equipment.

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