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

Update....... Confused More Than Ever


troykm

Recommended Posts

troykm Apprentice

Ok I am a person that needs yes or no. Either I have celilac or I don't. Lol

Today I went back to my specialist. My genetic test is still not back until tomorrow so still waiting for that one. My other blood work is great. Normal antibody test and all vitamin and mineral levels are great. So Dr Gi is still hesitant to say yes 100% to celiac. As I have been gluten free for 3 weeks now she said there is no point doing more biopsies now.

But because my initial biopsy was positive even though it was only a screening biopsy as opposed to a diagnostic biopsy (3 sections taken instead of 8) but all 3 sections showed villi damage and increase in those cells too. The lab said "indicative of but not diagnostic of partially treated celiac disease, recommend serological investigation". So because of that biopsy and the fact that after 3 weeks gluten free I'm feeling better and things are changing as one would expect if I were celiac, she wants me to stay gluten free and go back in 3 months for follow up and at that point she may want to do a gluten challenge for a month and then do more tests and biopsies then.

I need an answer.

If I had only negative blood work done and responded to gluten free ok could safely say it's just gluten intolerance. But because the biopsy picked up the damage, something is causing it!

Symptom relief so far:

Foggy brain almost gone

Sleeping better

More awake during the day

Sinus are clear for the first time I can ever remember

Post nasal drip is gone (this I have had since I was a child and it has never gone before)

Gerd is gone! No reflex, no burping, no food coming back up.

Bad breath during the day going. I used to be able to taste it.

Bloating receding

Stools changing towards solid but still tan colour and float.

Anxiety gone (normally in this situation I would be having panic attacks waiting for results)

Irritability going.

Brain working again. I am not fumbling for words anymore and I feel sharper.

My sister has just been diagnosed from the blood test her TTG WAS 300+ and the one that should be under 5 was 42. So family link is there.

I jjust don't know. I'm gonna stay on the diet and hope my genetic test lights up tomorrow but even then Dr won't say yes. :-(

Is it celiac or just gluten intolerance and something worse causing the damage?

I'm not lactose or fructose intolerant.

Help me lovely people :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



tom Contributor

Ok I am a person that needs yes or no. Either I have celiac or I don't. Lol

With a necessity for a yes/no, I'd be tempted to shift the question to "either I feel better gluten-free or I don't ".

Link to comment
Share on other sites
troykm Apprentice

Thanks tom, but that question is not good enough. Yes I feel better but that does not mean I have celiac. I may just have gluten intolerance which is fine, but then what's causing the intestinal damage? That's my dilemma. I'm not happy to take a chance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Gemini Experienced

Thanks tom, but that question is not good enough. Yes I feel better but that does not mean I have celiac. I may just have gluten intolerance which is fine, but then what's causing the intestinal damage? That's my dilemma. I'm not happy to take a chance.

You had a positive biopsy, your sister is a diagnosed Celiac, and you have had a positive response to the diet....explain to me why this hasn't convinced you? You could keep eating gluten for another biopsy down the road but are you willing to trash your intestines completely and develop other AI diseases to convince your doctor to baptize you as an official Celiac?

Having negative blood work and a positive biopsy is all too common for a Celiac. It sounds like you are being swayed by a doctor who does not know how to diagnose Celiac Disease. From what you have described, you have Celiac. I hope you do the right thing and stay gluten free!

Link to comment
Share on other sites
frieze Community Regular

Thanks tom, but that question is not good enough. Yes I feel better but that does not mean I have celiac. I may just have gluten intolerance which is fine, but then what's causing the intestinal damage? That's my dilemma. I'm not happy to take a chance.

Don't think I have ever seen the term "screening" used with an endoscopy when biopsies have been done.

Either those specimens were positive or not. Sounds like an attempt at duplicate procedures to make money. Going gluten free and continuing to pursue other reasons for damage are not mutually exclusive.

See if you can get your specimens sent to another lab for rereading.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
troykm Apprentice

You had a positive biopsy, your sister is a diagnosed Celiac, and you have had a positive response to the diet....explain to me why this hasn't convinced you? You could keep eating gluten for another biopsy down the road but are you willing to trash your intestines completely and develop other AI diseases to convince your doctor to baptize you as an official Celiac?

Having negative blood work and a positive biopsy is all too common for a Celiac. It sounds like you are being swayed by a doctor who does not know how to diagnose Celiac Disease. From what you have described, you have Celiac. I hope you do the right thing and stay gluten free!

Yes I know it sounds silly but after being misdiagnosed for so many years has made me question everything. I would love for this to be celiac because it would be easy to treat. But I just can't help thinking what if it's wrong and I'm missing something more serious. It's not a silly thought but i agree not helpful.

I'm staying gluten free. Thanks everyone for your answers :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
kareng Grand Master

So...you had enough damage that they found it with only 3 biopsy samples? The reason 8-12 samples is recommended is because some people don't have enough damage to find it with only 3 samples.

I guess you can live in denial for a few more years. That denial can lead to the more serious issues you are looking for.

I know you don't want to have Celiac, none of us really do, but looks like that is what you have.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



troykm Apprentice

I really want this to be celiac. But when the Dr says "this list of diseases can also cause villious atrophy" you start to wonder when the tests don't all point to yes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
eatmeat4good Enthusiast

Here is the Yes/no for you.

Symptom relief so far:

Foggy brain almost gone- YES!

Sleeping better- YES!

More awake during the day- YES!

Sinus are clear for the first time I can ever remember- YES!

Post nasal drip is gone (this I have had since I was a child and it has never gone before)- YES!

Gerd is gone! No reflex, no burping, no food coming back up.- YES!

Bad breath during the day going. I used to be able to taste it. - YES!

Bloating receding- YES!

Stools changing towards solid but still tan colour and float.- YES!

Anxiety gone (normally in this situation I would be having panic attacks waiting for results)- YES!

Irritability going.-YES!

Brain working again. I am not fumbling for words anymore and I feel sharper.-YES!

My sister has just been diagnosed -YES!

Do positive biopsies diagnose Celiac? -YES!

Is it commonly known as the Gold Standard of diagnosing Celiac?- YES!

Is there any other disease that has all these symptoms AND they all go away when you go gluten free?-- NO!

Celiac?- YES!

I think you are diagnosed...

And I think any other Dr. than the one you have would say you are Celiac.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
beebs Enthusiast

What were the list of the other things that cause flattened villi? And are you experiencing any symptoms that sound similar to any of those things? Sounds like celiac to me, I'm not a doctor obviously.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GFinDC Veteran

Casein sensitive enteropathy and parasites are a couple of other villi flatteners' But neither should improve because of a gluten-free diet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
nvsmom Community Regular

Casein sensitive enteropathy and parasites are a couple of other villi flatteners' But neither should improve because of a gluten-free diet.

This is a really good point! Other problems can cause villi flattening but your doctor wants you to go gluten-free to see if you feel better because he thinks it could be celiac. gluten-free diets only help celiacs so it sounds like you are in the process of confirming the diagnosis through diet... successfully. I guess that's the good and bad news all rolled into one, isn't it?

I believe I've seen stats stating somewhere between 20-30% of celiacs have negative blood tests, and their ceilac is only found through biopsy or vitamin deficiencies. It sounds like you fall into this group.

I hope you continue to improve on the diet. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
MitziG Enthusiast

Please give me your address so I can direct the skywriter to spell out YOU HAVE CELIAC.

Seriously....if you keep looking, you will find a reason to convince yourself that it isn't celiac. But it won't make it true.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
troykm Apprentice

Please give me your address so I can direct the skywriter to spell out YOU HAVE CELIAC.

Seriously....if you keep looking, you will find a reason to convince yourself that it isn't celiac. But it won't make it true.

Thanks it's all good now :-) diagnosis is 100% celiac. No other health issues. Onwards and upwards from here

Link to comment
Share on other sites
cavernio Enthusiast

For what it's worth, most food intolerances are *only* diagnosed by 'Not eating it, I feel better, and when I try it again, I feel worse'. There just don't exist accurate enough tests to say otherwise. And I say this now because celiacs often have other food intolerances which we only figure out once we've been gluten free.

It's very frustrating not knowing 100% for things, but for the vast majority of medical diagnoses, 100% certainty is just an ideal we strive for.

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
      121,215
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Michelr
    Newest Member
    Michelr
    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

    • mishyj
      Perhaps I should also have said that in addition to showing a very high response to gluten, her stool study showed that she had extreme reactions to everything achievement on it long course of microbials to treat that.
    • mishyj
      My daughter has celiac disease and has had for a long time. She fell loses strictly gluten-free diet and recently got rid of all cutting boards in any gluten in her house at all. She just had a stool test and it came back showing of gigantic response to gluten in her diet. What could be going on since she doesn't eat any gluten and is very careful about any kind of hidden glue? Help!
    • cristiana
      I think sometimes the pain described here can be a result of a sort of 'perfect storm' of contributing factors.  Recently I had an appalling bout of lower back pain, lower burning gut pain and what felt like cramps.  I then started to think about what could have caused it and I realised it was several things that had set it off: I'd been carrying heavy luggage (back strain); I had been sitting down in a car for too long and wearing a tight belt (I have pudendal nerve issues and sacroiliac issues and this exacerbates the pain), and I had bloating and burning pain in my colon caused by eating too much soy, latte and caffeine, I guess putting further pressure in the lower abdomen.  I had this same pain prior to my diagnosis and a couple of years post-diagnosis, I'd quite forgotten how unpleasant it was. 
    • cristiana
      HI @Kirbyqueen That's great news your insurance will be kicking in soon.  Sorry to see that you have been dealing with this for six months now, but I do hope you have managed to find some relief with some of the suggestions in the meantime. Perhaps come back and let us know what the doctor says. Cristiana
    • Scott Adams
      I agree, and hopefully your doctor will contact you soon about the next step, which will likely be an endoscopy to confirm your diagnosis. Do you have celiac disease symptoms? 
×
×
  • Create New...