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

What Kind Of Celiac Am I?


pennypicker

Recommended Posts

pennypicker Newbie

I was diagnosed in 2008 by blood tests then confirmed by biopsy. I have celiac disease. I've been gluten free ever since. Initially I was extremely cautious. However over the last 6 months or so I've become a bit more relaxed, and if something 'looked' gluten free at a party I would try it. Amazingly this method worked for me and I never get sick.

About a week ago I screwed up big time while eating sushi. I unknowingly ate a piece with chopped tempura in it. I was expecting the worst but only noticed a canker sore on my lip - no appreciable GI distress.

So here's my question: it appears as if I am a celiac that is somewhat insensitive to gluten (sounds like an oxymoron?). If I get traces of gluten in passing I observe no effect, a little bit of gluten (like that tempura roll) I see mild effects. I suspect, but am not willing to find out, if I had a big bowl of pasta I'd get very sick again.

Does this make any sense given what we understand about celiac disease? I'd appreciate anyone's thoughts on the subject.

Also, does this means it's safe for me to ingest trace amounts of gluten?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Metoo Enthusiast

Think of it this way, Celiac is an autoimmune disorder, in otherwords when you ingest gluten, your body attacks itself. In doing so it also causes inflamation.

So...no matter how little gluten you are ingesting, and whether you have 'noticeable' side effects you are still causing damage within your body, you are still also causing inflammation...and long term inflammation causes all kinds of problems including cancer.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
love2travel Mentor

I was diagnosed in 2008 by blood tests then confirmed by biopsy. I have celiac disease. I've been gluten free ever since. Initially I was extremely cautious. However over the last 6 months or so I've become a bit more relaxed, and if something 'looked' gluten free at a party I would try it. Amazingly this method worked for me and I never get sick.

About a week ago I screwed up big time while eating sushi. I unknowingly ate a piece with chopped tempura in it. I was expecting the worst but only noticed a canker sore on my lip - no appreciable GI distress.

So here's my question: it appears as if I am a celiac that is somewhat insensitive to gluten (sounds like an oxymoron?). If I get traces of gluten in passing I observe no effect, a little bit of gluten (like that tempura roll) I see mild effects. I suspect, but am not willing to find out, if I had a big bowl of pasta I'd get very sick again.

Does this make any sense given what we understand about celiac disease? I'd appreciate anyone's thoughts on the subject.

Also, does this means it's safe for me to ingest trace amounts of gluten?

Well, I was able to consume enormous amounts of gluten without getting sick at all but because my bloodwork was positive and biopsies indicated my villi were flattened, I have been strictly gluten free for nine months and will not even think of trying gluten. Reason? Even if I do not FEEL sick from gluten, my villi would be seriously damaged and I want to avoid other illnesses. Not only that but consuming gluten could trigger all sorts of things and I do not want to deal with that possibility. Celiac = No Gluten Ever in my world. Not even a teeny bit. I am taking no chances with my health and my future.

However, I can certainly see how it would be tempting if you do not feel ill.

Hopefully this helps to put things into perspective from someone who did not feel sick at all from consuming gluten! :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Lisa Mentor

Since 2008 you have been gluten free. I would expect that you are in, what I call remission. For me, it would take repetitive glutenings over an unknown period of time, creating damage, for me to be symptomatic again. Or, built up to the point where I can be aware of a symptom.

But, everyone is different.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
burdee Enthusiast

I was diagnosed in 2008 by blood tests then confirmed by biopsy. I have celiac disease. I've been gluten free ever since. Initially I was extremely cautious. However over the last 6 months or so I've become a bit more relaxed, and if something 'looked' gluten free at a party I would try it. Amazingly this method worked for me and I never get sick.

About a week ago I screwed up big time while eating sushi. I unknowingly ate a piece with chopped tempura in it. I was expecting the worst but only noticed a canker sore on my lip - no appreciable GI distress.

So here's my question: it appears as if I am a celiac that is somewhat insensitive to gluten (sounds like an oxymoron?). If I get traces of gluten in passing I observe no effect, a little bit of gluten (like that tempura roll) I see mild effects. I suspect, but am not willing to find out, if I had a big bowl of pasta I'd get very sick again.

Does this make any sense given what we understand about celiac disease? I'd appreciate anyone's thoughts on the subject.

Also, does this means it's safe for me to ingest trace amounts of gluten?

Active celiac disease (continuing to consume gluten) is correlated with many autoimmune diseases (including MS, type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, Sjogren's, etc., etc.). So is you don't have any reaction symptoms typicaly associated with celiac, you may continue to damage your intestines enough to let all those gluten antibodies wreck havoc on any number of other organs in your body and cause any of those autoimmune diseases. Of course, if you go to mainstream docs with symptoms of those autoimmune diseases, they will gladly prescribe for you drugs to treat your symptoms, while you continue to eat gluten and continue the damage which caused the autoimmune problems.

Also, many people find that after long periods of abstinence between episodes of gluten consumption, their reaction symptoms are more and more severe. So if you keep having occasional gluten, you may indeed develop traditional (painful) gluten reaction symptoms.

Some of us who were not diagnosed until midlife (after years of misdiagnoses) have all those painful reaction symptoms AND autoimmune diseases. Lucky you for getting diagnosed before you had really serious damage. Stay healthy by abstaining from gluten.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
domesticactivist Collaborator

Just chiming in here to echo what the others have said - you have celiac disease. Even if you don't feel it right away, gluten triggers autoimmune damage which is *not* a good thing!

I wonder if some of the variance in people's reactions has to do not only with the extent of the damage, but also with having different types of reactions as well. Some people are celiac AND allergic to wheat AND otherwise gluten-intolerant - allergies typically have immediate reactions and intolerances typically have a reaction anywhere from right away to a few days later.

When we first went gluten-free over a year ago I felt horrible in general (withdrawal), my digestion was totally out of whack, and I was pretty sure I could feel it when I got glutened, mostly with brain fog but also digestive upset.

A year later I am now doing a gluten-challenge. (I want to get tested for celiac disease - no idea if I have it or if I am "just" intolerant.) The first few days I felt great! I couldn't believe it. Then the symptoms started setting in. Now it's been a month and I feel awful all the time, I stink to high heaven, my moods are all over the place, weird neurological and arthritic symptoms I used to have have come back, my digestion is a mess, etcetera and so forth. This stuff builds up on you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Katrala Contributor

I'd say the majority of those with celiac have no major outward GI symptoms.

Which is why it's under diagnosed.

The symptoms of celiac also appear like other diseases as well, so I'd say it's not the easiest to diagnose. Plus, docs are still in the learning phases.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



burdee Enthusiast

I'd say the majority of those with celiac have no major outward GI symptoms.

Which is why it's under diagnosed.

The symptoms of celiac also appear like other diseases as well, so I'd say it's not the easiest to diagnose. Plus, docs are still in the learning phases.

Even when we do have obvious GI symptoms (gas, bloating, gut pain, constipation and/or diarrhea), doctors have scuh a rigid profile for celiac disease that they say things like "you don't have diarrhea, you can't have celiac" or "you are too old to have celiac" (after years of mis diagnoses) or "you have IBS like everyone else your age, learn to live with it", etc., etc. So many people with obvious GI symptoms either get misinformation about blood tests (like "you don't need to eat gluten before the test") or get an inadequate number of biopsy samples (although 5 samples are recomended, most lab techs only get about 3) or they get told they don't have celiac disease because they don't fit the doc's rigid profile for that disease.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Katrala Contributor

you don't have diarrhea, you can't have celiac"

I went to the doc for my checkup earlier this week and he was surprised to hear I wasn't having D, but the opposite.

He said "that's odd."

And I consider him good compared to other stories I've heard.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
curlyfries Contributor

Since 2008 you have been gluten free. I would expect that you are in, what I call remission. For me, it would take repetitive glutenings over an unknown period of time, creating damage, for me to be symptomatic again. Or, built up to the point where I can be aware of a symptom.

But, everyone is different.

Exactly. It seems that for some people who have been gluten free for a number of years and then do a challenge, it takes awhile for the damage being done to manifest itself into noticeable symptoms. You've probably done a good job of eating gluten-free for the past few years and you intestines are in pretty good shape.....unless you continue to eat gluten (even trace amounts will cause damage, noticeable or not). I predict that if you continue being lax about the trace amounts, the more issues you will begin to notice down the road, until you are right back where you started in 2008. When you were originally diagnosed, you were probably having issues long before you realized there was a problem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      121,210
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Sue Barnett
    Newest Member
    Sue Barnett
    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

    • trents
      You have three celiac disease specific antibody tests that are positive: Endomysial  Antibody IGA (aka, EMA), tTG-IGA, and tTG_IGG. Furthermore, your Immunoglobulin A at 55 is low, meaning you are IGA deficient. This one is not an antibody test for celaic disease per se but a measure of "total IGA" levels and if low (yours is low) it can suppress the individual antibody scores and even cause false negatives. So, yes, it definitely looks like you have celiac disease.   Do not yet begin a gluten free diet as your physician may refer you to a GI doc for an endoscopy/biopsy of the small bowel lining for confirmation of the antibody testing. This may help:   
    • Bayb
      Hi, I received my labs via email yesterday and have not heard back from my doctor yet. Can anyone tell me if these results indicate I have Celiac?      Endomysial Antibody IgAPositive  Ft-Transglutaminase (tTG) IgA6  H0-3 (U/mL) - Negative 0 - 3 - Weak Positive 4 - 10 - Positive >10 - Tissue Transglutaminase (tTG) has been identified as the endomysial antigen. Studies have demonstrated that endomysial IgA antibodies have over 99% specificity for gluten-sensitive enteropathy. FImmunoglobulin A, Qn, Serum55  L87-352 (mg/dL) Ft-Transglutaminase (tTG) IgG183  H0-5 (U/mL) - Negative 0 - 5 - Weak Positive 6 - 9 - Positive >9
    • Aussienae
      Mine is definitely triggered by inflammation and stress! I do also have arthritis in my spine, but the pain is more in my pelvic area. Im sure i have other food intolerances or other autoimmune isues but the more I focus on it and see doctor after doctor, it just gets worse.  Best thing is get of Gluten! (I also avoid lactose). Try to limit stress and anything that causes inflammation in your body.
    • ButWhatCanIEat
      Good morning,   I got an email about replies to this post. Some of my doctors had blamed a slipped disc for the pain I had and that contributes, but after meeting with a gastroenterologist AGAIN and trying some lifestyle modifications, I found out I have IBS and can't tolerate corn or excessive fructose to any degree. Cutting out corn AFTER having cut out all gluten containing products was a real pain but I feel much better now!
    • trents
      So, I contacted Scott Adams, the author of that article and also the creator/admin of this website, and pointed out to him the need to clarify the information in the paragraph in question. He has now updated the paragraph and it is clear that the DGP-IGA does serve the purpose of circumventing the false negatives that IGA deficiencies can generate in the tTG-IGA antibody test.
×
×
  • Create New...