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

Can I Have Gluten Intolerance?


AlexDAK

Recommended Posts

AlexDAK Newbie

Hi. Sorry for my English.

I had many strange symptoms for 6 years. Now I am 29. It begins with anxiety and ibs with diarhhea, but 4 years ago they become severe and many other symptoms added. They include:


1. Chronic fatigue

2. Brain fog, derealization

3. Anxiety

4. IBS-D

5. Light, sound sensitivity

6. Afterimages, visual snow

7. Constant ringing in ears

8. Cold hands

9. Gas, bloating

10. Hair loss

11. Weight loss


I did many tests and many doctors said that I’am ok, it’s just anxiety. But I continued to make research and once I took a full celiac panel. The results are here:


AGA IgA 2.04  < 25

AGA IgG 3.72  < 25

tTg IgA 13.25  < 25

tTg IgG not detected

DGP IgA 71.6  < 25

DGP IgG 0.2    <25

EMA IgA, IgG not detected


So, I only have hi DGP IgA, my doctor said that I don’t have celiac because my tTg and EMA are OK.

I also found, that my symptoms looks like Lyme or CFS/FMS, but I don’t have any joint pains. Also I read about anxiety disorder, metal toxicity and candida owergrowth, but I doubt this causes can give such severe symptoms.


So I am now on gluten-free diet for 20 days to figure out may be I have non celiac gluten intolerance, but I can’t say it helps so much. May be I need more time for gluten-free diet?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



NoGlutenCooties Contributor

Hi AlexDAK and Welcome!

 

Your symptoms do certainly sound like Celiac.  It is not uncommon to be positive on one or two of the Celiac blood tests and negative on the others - that's actually why it is so important to run all of them.  It isn't too late to request a biopsy to confirm it - but there is always a chance of getting a false negative from the biopsy and your chances of a false negative increase the longer you are gluten free prior to the test.

 

To know if being gluten free is going to relieve your symptoms, you have to be sure that you are 100% gluten free.  That means you have to check all labels, avoid eating out - especially at first, and avoid cross-contamination.  Read the "newbie" thread at the top of the "Coping With" forum for some ideas.  Also, it can take a couple of months for some people to start to see improvement - depending on your symptoms, how long you've had them, and how efficient your body is at getting rid of the antibodies.  Make sure you are not still getting gluten from somewhere and give it some more time.

 

Good luck!

nvsmom Community Regular

Your English is better than mine.  :)

 

I agree that you have symptoms of celiac disease. An elevated DGP IgA is 93-97% specific to celiac disease as see on page 12 of this report: Open Original Shared Link That means that 4-7% of all positive DGP IgA tests are possibly caused by something else. I'm afraid I am not sure what the other causes would be, but false positive in the tTG tests are sometimes caused by thyroiditis, diabetes, crohn's, colitis, chronic liver disease or an infection. If you doubt that you have celiac disease, perhaps one of these disorders could be to blame. 

 

Personally, I would thing that a positive celiac test, and the presence of symptoms, would point to celiac disease - especially if symptoms improve after you have been gluten-free for a long time. A 20 day gluten-free trial is very very short.  Some people experience withdrawal, and if you are one of those you could still be feeling worse on day 20 and not even started to improve yet. A 6 month gluten-free period will tell you a LOT more; a 3 month gluten-free period is sometimes enough for people  to know gluten is a problem for them. I also suggest keeping a food and symptom journal so you can keep track of how you feel.

 

Don't go gluten-free until you are sure all testing is done though. Blood tests require gluten in the diet 8-12 weeks prior to testing, and the endoscopic biopsy requires a 2-4 week gluten challenge. If you are sure all testing is done, start your gluten-free diet.

 

Those are also symptoms of hypothyroidism.  You might want to get that checked. TSH, free T3 and free T4, and TPO Ab are helpful thyroid tests.

 

Best wishes. I hope you feel well soon.

  • 3 weeks later...
AlexDAK Newbie

So, after 40 days of gluten free my IBS-D reduced by 70-80%, I have less gas and almost no episodes of diarhhea. But my other symptoms are still present. So, I think I must have a biopsy after gluten diet after 14 days. Also I made a DNA test, but results will be after 14 days. I am sure now, that gluten have an influence on me, but I need to figure out, is this celiac or something else.   

nvsmom Community Regular

A DGP IgA most likely points to celiac disease, and since your symptoms are improving after only 40 days on the gluten-free diet, I would guess with confidence that you have celiac disease. :(

 

Keep in mind that there is a very very small minority of celiacs that were negative on the genetic tests but still had a positive celiac test. It's unusual, but it can happen. Your diet will not affect the results.

 

Good luck with the 14 day gluten challenge and biopsy. Try to ensure your doctor takes at least 6 samples for biopsy.  I hope you find the answers you are looking for.

  • 3 weeks later...
AlexDAK Newbie

So, I have negative HLA test. Waiting for a biopsy to be 100% sure. After 14 days of gluten challenge I still have no IBS-D. I think it's beacause I began to take probiotics in the beginning of gluten-free diet.

nvsmom Community Regular

There is a small minority of celiacs who have negative genetic testing yet have positive blood tests or endoscopic biopsies, and feel better on the gluten-free diet. I'm guessing that it's celiac disease, but I tend to think that if it "looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it is probably a duck" .... even if doctors say it is not.  That is just my opinion though; I am not medically trained.

 

Good luck with the biopsy. Make sure they take at least 6 samples - more is better.  Let us know how it goes.  :)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • 1 month later...
AlexDAK Newbie

Hi. So, my biopsy results are ready. I'll try to translate them to english.

 

Microscopical aspect: The fragments of the small intestine mucous membrane are with weakly reduced villi length, enlarged crypt depth, with diffuse mononuclear infiltrate of own mucous plate.

 

Conclusion: morphologic picture of minor chronic duodenitis, wich may occur in 1-2 stage celiac disease.

 

 

I don't know about what stages it is written about. I have read that if there is even a little villi reduced length it is the 3-d stage by Marsh classification. Am I right? 

 

My doc said i have to be 3-4 months on gluten free diet and make the biopsy one more time to prove celiac.

GF Lover Rising Star

Hi AlexDan and Welcome to the Forum.

 

Why does he want you to repeat the biopsy in 3-4 months.  Is he waiting for even more damage to occur.  Have you had any blood work done for Celiac?

 

Colleen

AlexDAK Newbie

Hi AlexDan and Welcome to the Forum.

 

Why does he want you to repeat the biopsy in 3-4 months.  Is he waiting for even more damage to occur.  Have you had any blood work done for Celiac?

 

Colleen

Hi. I had full celiac panel done. My results are in the first post. My doc said, that I must go gluten free and after 3-4 months if there will be no villi damage, it means that the villi was damaged by celiac disease.

GF Lover Rising Star

Oh...ok..you are going to go gluten free until the next biopsy...gottcha, That makes more sense.  

 

Push for 4 months at least to get the most healing time.  Read the Newbie 101 thread under the Coping Section.  And jump into gluten free.

 

Have you had your Thyroid checked and blood test for deficiencies.  These could address the rest of your symptoms if they don't get better going gluten free.

 

It looks to me like your belong in the club  :)

 

Good Luck Alex

 

Colleen

nvsmom Community Regular

I agree that you might want to push that biopsy back a bit. Autoantibodies can linger a long time after going gluten-free. Many celiacs will still have autoantibodies after a couple of months gluten-free, and some still have measurable levels after a year gluten-free - if the are autoantibodies, there is probably damage.

 

An easier move might be to recheck your DGP IgA levels. The DGP IgA is one of the best tests for dietary compliance as it respondes to the gluten-free diet faster than the tTG based tests would - getting blood drwan is just so much less invasive.  Besides, as a general rule, doctors do not do a repeat biopsy unless you are still having problems after being gluten-free for quite some time.  That he wants to recheck "just to be sure" is unusual.

 

Welcome to the club - officially.  ;)

  • 2 weeks later...
AlexDAK Newbie

Thanks a lot for your support.

Now I am reading more about HLA tests to make sure I have negative HLA for celiac.

My HLA results:

 

DQA1*01:04, 02:01

DQB1*05:03, 02:02

 

So, I have no DQA1*05, but I have DQA1*02:01 and DQB1*02:02 and according to this

Open Original Shared Link

and this

Open Original Shared Link

it's not rare to have these genes for celiacs.

 

And I also looked at this table:

Open Original Shared Link

And I see that DQA1*02:01 and DQB1*02:02 means I have DQ2?

 

Please, can you help me with interpretation?

AlexDAK Newbie

I made some research. According to DQA1*02:01 and DQB1*02:02 i have DQ2.2. I found that as many as 5% of patients with celiac disease carry DQ2.2 without any other risk alleles. So, now I can't say my HLA test is negative.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      130,148
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Lynda H
    Newest Member
    Lynda H
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • N00dnutt
      Hi @terrymouse Generally, after a Celiac Seriology Blood Test, if something anomalous shows up, the follow-up will be a Gastroscope. Your Endocrinonogist will be looking to see if you still have (Villi). Villi are Tenticles/Hairs that are prevalent throughout the small intestine; their function is to extract nutrients, vitamins and water. The absense of Villi will typically result in watery bowl movements, other telltale signs being, lethargy, feeling cold, always hungry (valuable nutrients are being bypassed). I was diagnosed 12 years ago. One other thing associated with an AutoImmune Disease, they generally have a companion, in my case I have Hypothyroidism, other may have Hyperthyroidism (Hashimoto's). Others may get Eczema, or some other skin disorder, usually due to not getting the proper nutrition your body needs.   HTH Mark.  
    • jeriM
      Thank you Knitty Kitty,   I have all the information for the nutritionist sitting in front of me, but I've procrastinated.   Between you and Scott - I'll contact him tomorrow and get started on a better me.   Thank you both for all the support and information.    
    • knitty kitty
      Hi, @jeriM, I can attest to Celiac and eye problems being connected!  There's a higher rate of Sjogren's Syndrome in Celiac people than in those without celiac disease.  Sjogren's Syndrome causes dry eyes and can even lead to dry mouth which can alter taste and smell.  Have your doctor check for Sjogren's.  Correct low Vitamin D, which regulates the immune system.  Talk to your nutritionist about including in your diet plenty of Omega Three's. Omega Three's help keep our eyes moist and lubricated.  You know how oil floats on water, same thing with our eyes!  Fun fact:  Our eyes are derived from the same sort of tissues as our digestive tract in a developing fetus. Oh, check your thyroid function, too.  Hashimoto's thyroiditis frequently occurs with Sjogren's. Autoimmune diseases tend to cluster in celiac disease.  I also have Diabetes type two.   Discuss with your nutritionist the benefits of a low histamine diet.  A low histamine diet can help reduce inflammation and gets those inflammation markers down.  I like the Autoimmune Protocol Diet, a Paleo diet that promotes intestinal health. Best wishes!  Keep us posted on your progress!
    • jeriM
      Ah, Scott,    Ha ha!  Thats almost a reasonable assumption given the prices during the shortage.  However, our eggs?  We always gave them away to friends and seniors we know, so no mansion here.  Now we have to buy eggs like everyone else.   The house we found, we loved so much that it made it worth it for us to give up the chickens.  A hard decision.   
    • Scott Adams
      Claritin is an allergy medication which can help with allergy symptoms, but may not be helpful with gluten exposure.
×
×
  • Create New...