Jump to content
  • 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

What Is The Recommended Test For Food Allergens? Food Journal Isn't Cutting It Anymore..


ezgoindude

Recommended Posts

ezgoindude Explorer

Good Evening yall,

 

    So for now I guess you would refer to me as undiagnosed (been working on this for almost 6 months)  and my doctor is really trying hard to give me a diagnosis, were still waiting on some (more!) blood work....

In the meantime I was on an elimination diet but it seems very difficult considering really no matter what I eat I'm generally the same, I've only been gluten free for 3 months and although I feel generally much healthier I'm sure something is still messed up as my bathroom breaks and general body weight continue to be a hit or miss.

I'd like to heal my body as efficiently and quickly as possible, and am nervous that I could be intolerant to other things...(stopped dairy as well, trying to avoid all corn and soy but that is a toughie)

 

 

 

Is there a preferred allergen test that is more effective than another?

 

I heard they are usually expensive and I want to make sure I'm not getting spun in circles like my confused gastro is doin....

 

 

 

Any personal advice/ stories/ experiences would be incredible!  This forum reminds me that these symptoms aren't "all in my head"


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



IrishHeart Veteran

Allergies are not the same as food intolerances. The symptoms are very different and may involve anaphylaxis.

 

Celiac disease is not a gluten allergy, even though many people (incorrectly) use that phrase. It is an autoimmune disease. 

 

Allergies are IgE -mediated and you should see an allergist/immunologist for testing (although those tests are considered by some to be unreliable)

 

Food intolerances or gluten sensitivty--well, there are no valid tests at this time for gluten sensitivity and food intolerances, so I am afraid if you were to buy an expensive online test kit, you would be wasting your money.

 

If you were tested for celiac disease while you were gluten free, the test result is invalid because you have to be consuming gluten for the body to mount an autoimmune attack and produce antibodies. So, that test result may not be accurate at all. Your gastroenterologist should have told you that. Sorry.

CaliSparrow Collaborator

I went to an MD who specializes in Functional Medicine. This was about eight months after going gluten-free. At that point, I had not experienced much improvement, however, if I ate a crumb of gluten, it was as if an invisible troll would jump out of the bushes and beat me for days. It was a pretty horrible experience to have continued illness and NOW add regular beatings to the list.

I took the food intolerance tests. Insurance used to cover it but they stopped in 2012 so it was very expensive. Within days of eliminating my intolerant foods, my years-long inflammation went away. I had been in so much pain that pulling the sheet up over my shoulder in the morning was excruciating. This all but disappeared after eliminating those foods and it was the fastest improvement I've experienced to date.

I can't say if I'm healing any faster, but the inflammation in my arms and legs which was so crippling has all but disappeared. If I reintroduce a food I'm intolerant to, the inflammation is there again.

Something I wish I'd known beforehand is to not eat in restaurants for the first year. That would have made things easier.

The best of luck on your healing journey!

kareng Grand Master

I went to an MD who specializes in Functional Medicine. This was about eight months after going gluten-free. At that point, I had not experienced much improvement, however, if I ate a crumb of gluten, it was as if an invisible troll would jump out of the bushes and beat me for days. It was a pretty horrible experience to have continued illness and NOW add regular beatings to the list.

I took the food intolerance tests. Insurance used to cover it but they stopped in 2012 so it was very expensive. Within days of eliminating my intolerant foods, my years-long inflammation went away. I had been in so much pain that pulling the sheet up over my shoulder in the morning was excruciating. This all but disappeared after eliminating those foods and it was the fastest improvement I've experienced to date.

I can't say if I'm healing any faster, but the inflammation in my arms and legs which was so crippling has all but disappeared. If I reintroduce a food I'm intolerant to, the inflammation is there again.

Something I wish I'd known beforehand is to not eat in restaurants for the first year. That would have made things easier.

The best of luck on your healing journey!

 

 

Most "functional medicine doctors" are not MDs.  

 

I am happy if you feel these tests helped you but there are no medically/scientifically proven tests for food intolerances.  Allergies are different and there are some ways to test for them.

CaliSparrow Collaborator

Mine is an MD. She obtained her MD from UC San Diego, received the Mead Johnson Leadership Award and served as the Chief Resident for Obstetrics at Long Beach Memorial.

If you go to FunctionalMedicine.org there is a listing of doctors who practice medicine under this model.

Thanks though :)

StephanieL Enthusiast

Intolerance testing isn't scientifically sound, hasn't been peer reviewed or accepted in the medical community. Even IgE allergy testing has a super high false positive rate which is why it isn't suggested to test for anything unless there has been a known reaction within 20 minutes to 2 hours of ingesting the suspected allergen.

kareng Grand Master

Intolerance testing isn't scientifically sound, hasn't been peer reviewed or accepted in the medical community. Even IgE allergy testing has a super high false positive rate which is why it isn't suggested to test for anything unless there has been a known reaction within 20 minutes to 2 hours of ingesting the suspected allergen.

 

 

Listen to Stephanie.  She knows a lot about this stuff.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ezgoindude Explorer

Good Evening everyone!

 

Thank you for your replies, I apologize but I'm sure I did say terms wrong.

 

There is a very high probability I can never have gluten again, and I'm ok that, and have been feeling slowly better the few months i haven't had it. (also no dairy atm until all symptoms calm down)

In the meantime many people have said there is still lingering inflammation, possibly leaking gut, candida, parsisites, etc.... I don't believe I could have, but there are several other foods many people have been pushing me to avoid like:

 

Nightshades? (tomatos and eggplant i think)

Eggs

Soy

Corn

all Grains?

 

I'm not willing to reduce myself to starvation, considering I'm not absorbing too much anyway, but I was hoping to see if there was a test that checks for things that irritate or inflame my guts.

 

The test my gastro doctor said is the "universal" test is they take needles and poke your arms and back and pretty much wait there until your skin freaks out or not.  His opinion is to not get this test as my insurance will not cover and foods that irritate your skin may not irritate your stomach, or something like that. 

 

CaliSparrow, I never thought about restaurants, I'll have to be extra careful.  The only time I was almost reglutened when I went to Texas roadhouse of all places and the waitress points out to ask for no butter spread for my steaks as it has a gluten ingredient.  Whoa

CaliSparrow Collaborator

Intolerance testing isn't scientifically sound, hasn't been peer reviewed or accepted in the medical community. Even IgE allergy testing has a super high false positive rate which is why it isn't suggested to test for anything unless there has been a known reaction within 20 minutes to 2 hours of ingesting the suspected allergen.

Dear Stephanie,

You sound like you have a lot of experience as a moderator on these boards and have probably seen a lot.  Why do people coming to these boards put so much emphasis on getting a diagnosis for food intolerance?  I can understand testing for Celiac.

I know in my case that the testing I did revealed that many foods such as ginger, coconut and other favorite foods (55+) could be causing me trouble.  The reliability of the diagnosis was secondary because I was going to run through many of these foods on the rotation diet and it gave me a prioritized list of the foods I needed to test.  I took these foods out of my diet and my inflammation dropped dramatically.  Without the test, I would have gotten there but it would have taken a much longer time.

Do you find that the search for a diagnosis diverts people from the main goal of getting well as it relates to food intolerances other than gluten?

Thank you for your response.

StephanieL Enthusiast

First off, I am not a moderator on this board :) Just a member.

 

Different people see different reasons to test things out as far as intolerances are concerned.  I understand being sick and tired of not feeling well and the desperate search for ANYTHING that will make them feel better and I think these tests prey on that assumption unfortunately.   I feel these tests relieve people of a lot of money, severely limit ones diet and doesn't get to the issue in many cases.  If you remove 20 foods from your diet, sure you may feel better but the there is figuring out what the real issue is.  

 

The reality is that MOST people with food allergies don't have more than one or two (and even that is unusual).  For 20, 30, 40 foods to cause an intolerance  issue points to either a much bigger issue or grasping at straws for anything to stick.

 

All this to say that the only 100% reliable test is none of them, not even for allergies.  Food logs and trials and elimination diets are really the only ways to figure that stuff out. 

GFinDC Veteran

Hi EZgoing,

 

I see you have only been on the gluten-free diet for a few months now.  Things seem to be pretty rocky in the digestive system for many people when they first start out on the diet.  Things can go back and forth, better to worse etc for quite a while.  I posted in the other thread to you about elimination diets.  But IMHO you are still too early in the gluten-free diet for an elimination diet to be helpful.  I think it's better to wait 6 months or so to let your body heal some and then consider an elimination diet.

 

Some starting the gluten-free diet tips for the first 6 months:

Get tested before starting the gluten-free diet.
Get your vitamin/mineral levels tested also.
Don't eat in restaurants
Eat only whole foods not processed foods.
Eat only food you cook yourself, think simple foods, not gourmet meals.
Take probiotics.
Take gluten-free vitamins.
Take digestive enzymes.
Avoid dairy if it causes symptoms.
Avoid sugars and starchy foods. They can cause bloating.
Avoid alcohol.
Watch out for cross contamination.

Helpful threads:

FAQ Celiac com
https://www.celiac.com/gluten-free/forum-7/announcement-3-frequently-asked-questions-about-celiac-disease/

Newbie Info 101
https://www.celiac.com/forums/topic/91878-newbie-info-101/
 

StephanieL Enthusiast

 

The test my gastro doctor said is the "universal" test is they take needles and poke your arms and back and pretty much wait there until your skin freaks out or not.  His opinion is to not get this test as my insurance will not cover and foods that irritate your skin may not irritate your stomach, or something like that. 

 

Just to tough on this, what your Dr is suggesting is known as skin prick tests (SPT) and are for allergies, not intolerances.  This testing along with blood testing for allergies is only about 50% accurate for a positive which is why it isn't recommended to diagnose a food allergy though many Dr's do which is really sad and wrong!  For example, when my son was tested he was positive for the Top 8 EXCEPT wheat (so soy, dairy, egg, peanut, tree nuts, fish and shell fish) plus corn and citrus fruits.  We had seen reactions to dairy, egg and peanuts. So we removed all those plus some others from his diet.  As it turns out the corn, citrus, soy, fish and shell fish were most likely false positives but I didn't know any better at the time to question it. 

 

So as you can see, allergy testing isn't very accurate.  Intolerance "testing" is even less so.  I do agree with what others have said that you are still pretty new to this and it may just take time.  Really detailed food logs can be of the most use if you do see things are still bothering you.  I know that's how we figured out my sons coconut/palm issue.  We kept tabs down to every single think in everything he ate. It was very daunting but it was key in figuring things out in the end. 

 

I will also plug probiotics.  Even after eliminating his allergens and gluten DS still had issues.  After 3 days on a great probiotic he was like a new kid. 

CaliSparrow Collaborator

First off, I am not a moderator on this board :) Just a member.

Different people see different reasons to test things out as far as intolerances are concerned. I understand being sick and tired of not feeling well and the desperate search for ANYTHING that will make them feel better and I think these tests prey on that assumption unfortunately. I feel these tests relieve people of a lot of money, severely limit ones diet and doesn't get to the issue in many cases. If you remove 20 foods from your diet, sure you may feel better but the there is figuring out what the real issue is.

The reality is that MOST people with food allergies don't have more than one or two (and even that is unusual). For 20, 30, 40 foods to cause an intolerance issue points to either a much bigger issue or grasping at straws for anything to stick.

All this to say that the only 100% reliable test is none of them, not even for allergies. Food logs and trials and elimination diets are really the only ways to figure that stuff out.

Hi Stephanie :) (maybe you should apply :D )

Thank you for your willingness to openly discuss this topic :)

You're right, I was desperate for help when I had the testing done and I hope I don't have a much bigger issue! Before I found this site, I watched the videos of a famous person with Celiac being tested for food intolerances and assumed this was a standard procedure. (Just to be clear, I don't typically follow what famous people do ;) but she was front and center at the time I discovered gluten to be the problem.) Even though my experience with MDs is not stellar, it is an MD who suggested this test.

There really isn't much information out there except I found an NIH-funded article that doubts IgG can reveal sensitivities accurately in IBS: Open Original Shared Link

along with two studies by a NIH-funded medical school using food intolerance testing to prove out their hypothesis that it can help in a couple of areas: self-reported GI disorders - Open Original Shared Link

and obesity - Open Original Shared Link This begs the question, why would an unreliable test be used to prove out these hypothesis? Wouldn't that be a risky proposition at the git-go?

These studies do mention inflammation and that is what I noticed disappear after eliminating the foods. It is an expensive test. I had spent thousands beforehand so it wasn't a stretch to bite the bullet in the hopes it would help and it did. My body was in trouble with all of the inflammation.

I understand the concern about reliability testing and this will continue to peak my curiosity.

CaliSparrow Collaborator

CaliSparrow, I never thought about restaurants, I'll have to be extra careful.  The only time I was almost reglutened when I went to Texas roadhouse of all places and the waitress points out to ask for no butter spread for my steaks as it has a gluten ingredient.  Whoa

Ha ha I KNOW! Imagine all the servers who don't understand where it's hidden or about cross-contamination. Some people find success eating out overtime but for me, eating in restaurants ended up making my year one unforgettable. My husband is gluten-intolerant and not as sensitive and he can get away with eating what restaurants serve gluten-free although he says he doesn't feel well afterwards and prefers eating at home.

I wish you continued health on your journey!

StephanieL Enthusiast

I'm not sure why they chose that test but I assume it was to show that removal of foods that showed high IgG levels was't helpful. Here's a little on IgG testing:

 

"I see patients every week who have had IgG testing for food allergy, in which their blood was tested for IgG antibodies instead of IgE antibodies (the antibodies typically associated with allergies). These patients often come in on extremely restricted diets because they had tested positive to so many things. This is no surprise though because a normal immune system is supposed to make IgG antibodies to foreign proteins, and a positive IgG test to a food is therefore a sign of a normal immune system rather than a sign of food allergy. ", the whole article can be found here: Open Original Shared Link

 

I get being desperate. We are still having issues with my son who is 7. Many of his issues I have had to discover by myself and we are still dealing with off blood work and a frustrated Mom. I did several elimination diets when he was nursing but none of them seemed to help because I never removed *all* of the right things at the same time BUT his are actual IgE (can cause anaphylaxis) allergies. Unfortunately immunology is no where hear perfect science at this point.  It's ever changing and evolving and very complicated :(

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,916
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    kls888
    Newest Member
    kls888
    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

    • knitty kitty
      I followed the Autoimmune Protocol Diet which is really strict for a while, but later other foods can be added back into your diet.  Following the AIP diet strictly allows you digestive system to heal and the inflammation to calm down.  Sort of like feeding a sick baby easy to digest food instead of spicy pizza.   It's important to get the inflammation down because chronic inflammation leads to other health problems.  Histamine is released as part of the autoimmune response to gluten.  High histamine levels make you feel bad and can cause breathing problems (worsening asthma), cardiovascular problems (tachycardia), and other autoimmune diseases (Hashimoto's thyroiditis, diabetes) and even mental health problems. Following the low histamine version of the AIP diet allows the body to clear the histamine from our bodies.  Some foods are high in histamine.  Avoiding these makes it easier for our bodies to clear the histamine released after a gluten exposure.   Vitamin D helps regulate the immune system and calm it down.  Vitamin D is frequently low in Celiacs.  The B Complex vitamins and Vitamin C are needed to clear histamine.   Supplementing with essential vitamins and minerals boosts your intestines' ability to absorb them while healing.   Keep in mind that gluten-free facsimile foods, like gluten-free bread, are not enriched with added vitamins like their gluten containing counterparts are.   They are empty calories, no nutritional value, which use up your B vitamins in order to turn the calories into fuel for the body to function.   Talk to your doctor or nutritionist about supplementing while healing.  Take a good B Complex and extra Thiamine in the form Benfotiamine (shown to promote gut health).  Most B Complex vitamins contain thiamine mononitrate which the body cannot utilize.  Meats and liver are good sources of B vitamins.   Dr. Sarah Ballantyne wrote the book, the Paleo Approach.  She's a Celiac herself.  Her book explains a lot.   I'm so glad you're feeling better and finding your balance!
    • klmgarland
      So I should not eat my gluten free bread?  I will try the vitamins.  Thank you all so very much for your ideas and understanding.  I'm feeling better today and have gathered back my composure!
    • knitty kitty
      Some people prefer eating gluten before bed, then sleeping through the worst symptoms at night.  You might want to try that and see if that makes any difference.   Several slices of toast for breakfast sounds okay.  Just try to work up to the Ten grams of gluten.  Cookies might only have a half of a gram of gluten.  The weight of the whole cookie is not the same as the amount of gluten in it.  So do try to eat bread things with big bubbles, like cinnamon rolls.   Yeah, I'm familiar with the "death warmed over" feeling.  I hope you get the genetic test results quickly.  I despise how we have to make ourselves sick to get a diagnosis.  Hang in there, sweetie, the tribe is supporting you.  
    • Clear2me
      Thank you, a little expensive but glad to have this source. 
    • Xravith
      @knitty kitty  Thank you very much for the advice. I did the exam this morning, my doctor actually suggested me to take something called "Celiac duo test" in which I first do the genetic test and if it's positive, then I'll have to do the antigen blood test. I have to attend 1 month until my results are ready, so I have some weeks to increase the amount of gluten I eat daily. It will be hard because my health is not the best right now, but I also did a blood test to cheek my nutritional deficiencies. The results will arrive on Tuesday, so I can ask my doctor what should I do to control my symptoms and blood levels during this month. For now I'm resting and paying attention to what I eat— at least I don’t look like a vampire who just woke up, like I did yesterday. I'm still scared because is the first time I've felt this sick, but this is the right moment to turn things around for the better.  I realized that if I eat gluten at lunch I cannot finish the day properly, I become severely tired and sometimes my stomach hurts a lot - let's not talk about the bloating that starts later. Do you think is it ok to eat gluten just in the morning, like some cookies and slices of bread for breakfast? 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.