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 Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Celiac Testing


zombiezombie

Recommended Posts

zombiezombie Newbie

Hi everyone,

 

I am new to this forum. 

 

The past few years have been difficult. I am a 28 year old woman, and I've been on a medical rollar coaster.

 

In 2010, out of the blue, I started getting extremely intense headaches and I had nerve pain going down my right arm (neuropathy down my arm and into my pinky and ring finger). I was absolutely out of my mind. PT wasn't helpful, but acupuncture curbed the nerve pain somewhat. It still flares up from time to time, though. That ordeal lasted around 5 months.

 

There was a window of a few months were I felt relatively OK.

 

In the spring of 2011, I started getting nauseated after meals. The doctors told me it was probably reflux and told me to take prilosec. I went into a downward spiral into GI hell and I lost about 35 pounds. I was at a healthy weight before the drop, so I became very, very thin. They found out my gall bladder was sluggish, but there were no stones (biliary dyskinesia). They DID test for celiac during this time (via intestine biopsy), but lost the results. My GB was removed and I felt improvement in my digestion after a month post op. I made the connection between Celiac and GB issues with these articles...

 

 

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

 

All was still not well. Some days I felt like I was about to puke all day long, and I couldn't figure out why. Doctors shrugged and gave me more prilosec. I went on the paleo diet as an experiment in the summer of 2012, and a lot of my nausea disappeared. Not totally, but it certainly took the edge off. I started introducing non paleo things back into my diet, and wheat was what was setting me off. Over the fall of 2012 I fell of the paleo wagon and was in a perpetual state of nausea. I cut out wheat again this spring and I feel so much better. 

 

TMI BELOW!

 

When I eat wheat these days, I get very bad diarrhea. My period is also heavier when I don't eat wheat - when I was eating wheat I was skipping periods, or they would be very very faint. 

 

I suspect with the neurological symptoms (is the type of neuropathy I experienced a symptom of Celiac?), the loss of my gall bladder and the GI symptoms I experience with wheat that I have Celiac disease. I am treating it as Celiac disease and cutting all wheat out. Is it irresponsible not to get tested for Celiac? If I could get tested for it without purposely glutening myself I would, but I hesitate to purposely make myself sick. 


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



jhol Enthusiast

to be honest,

its completely up to you if you want the testing or not. or whether you could cope with the symptoms long enough to have the tests. there,s many on here who havent had the tests and some - like me that had the tests and they turned out negative!!! you could be gluten intolerant rather than celiac -and you,d only know if you have the tests - either way its the same diet you,d have to follow.

some people struggle without a diagnosis ( i do)- but like i said its your call - i think the diagnosis only really helps if your younger - still at school/college where accommodations would have to be made for you (im from uk so not sure where your from, think this applies in america)

good luck :)

nvsmom Community Regular

If you are eating gluten at all, it might be worth your while to get tested BEFORE you commit to the gluten-free diet (it sounds like you are eating gluten light at the moment). Who knows, you might be consuming enough gluten to register positive blood tests - it doesn't take much, but do the tests sooner rather than later (when the autoantibody levels drop).

 

The blood tests are:

ttg IgA and ttg IgG

total serum IgA

EMA IgA

DGP IgG and DGP IgA

AGA IgA and AGA IgG (older tests)

 

You could also request nutrient levels be tested as celiacs are commonly low in iron, ferritin, B12, D, calcium and potassium. Thyroid problems are common in celiacs too so you might want yours checked.

 

Once you commit to the gluten-free diet, make sure you are on it 100%. Check your meds, vitamins, spices, sauces, and your baking ingredients (like baking powder or sugar) which might have become contaminated with wheat flour.  And good luck with it. I hope you continue to feel better.

zombiezombie Newbie

I haven't eaten gluten for about a month. Things aren't perfect, but I feel a heck of a lot better. 

 

It's kind of crazy how gluten makes it's way into the most ridiculous stuff...it's been an eye opening experience. 

 

Are there any brands of spices, as a whole, that aren't gluten free? 

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,129
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Maeghan
    Newest Member
    Maeghan
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • NoriTori
      @Scott Adams No one said anything about eating gluten consistently until testing, the appointment was scheduled and an address was given. I don't even have access to the results as it stands. I was just told "everything looks fine, but slight irritation." I don't know if they took a biopsy because I have no access to the results. I don't know how many samples they took (I recently learned they're supposed to take more than one), I don't know what things looked like internally, it was just word of mouth and I didn't know any better to pry and get copies of everything. And I know! I also have chronic Anemia, never truly resolved UNTIL I went gluten free, and low vitamin D (fairly normal in black community), and low creatine (also resolved with gluten free diet). I plan to request a new dermatologist! As well as a referral to Gastro. Food/symptom diary is a great idea though. I have no way of cooking as it stands, so even just the basics wouldn't work for me.
    • trents
      @NoriTori, "gluten intolerance" is a general term that can refer to either celiac disease or NCGS. NCGS is often referred to as "gluten sensitivity" for short. Though, admittedly, there is still a great deal of inconsistency in the use of terms by the general public.
    • NoriTori
      @trents A gluten intolerance is a real possibility! I never ruled it out, but am keen on finding out the EXACT cause. I'd want testing done again to be sure it's not celiac, or SIBO (which I've considered) or other digestive disorder. Celiac seems the most pertinent considering its implications.
    • sillyac58
      Thanks so much Scott. I would be incredibly grateful to the gluten gods if eliminating oats was the magic cure. In the meantime, it's nice to have moral support! 
    • trents
      Understood. And don't beat yourself up about this. Many are in the same boat as you, having experimented with the gluten-free diet before getting formerly tested. It is a logical, common sense approach when you don't have the knowledge about how testing works or you don't have the healthcare resources to afford testing. And some experience such severe reactions to gluten that it is impossible to get through the gluten challenge in order to get tested. So, they must live with the ambiguity of not knowing for sure if they suffer from celiac disease or NCGS. But at the end of the day, the antidote is the same for both. Namely, life-ling abstinence from gluten. Recently there was an article on posted on this forum about the develop of a new testing method for diagnosing celiac disease that do not require a gluten challenge. It is still in the developmental stage and probably years away from becoming main streams even if it pans out. But there is hope at least.
×
×
  • Create New...