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

Help Me De-Code These Results


user001

Recommended Posts

user001 Contributor

So as i posted earlier, I have been gluten-free for 4 months and the doc ran the celiac blood tests without me first doing a gluten challenge. I dont understand the results, so someone help me de code them.

 

Tissue tansglutam ab IGA- >100

IGA- 202

endomysial antibody SCR (iga)- postive A

endomysial antibody titer- 1:160

 

No clue what any of it means. also it looks like IGA is just on there 3 times?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



RMJ Mentor

IgA is a type of antibody, but just saying IgA doesn't say what "antigen" the antibody recognizes.

IgA 202 is your total IgA level. This is checked because some people with celiac don't make much IgA - if that had been the case and the other IgA tests were negative, one couldn't say yes or no to celiac and then would have to test IgG antibodies. But yours is in a normal range so the other tests are valid.

Tissue Transglutaminase IgA and endomysial antibody IgA are both tests for celiac disease. They are performed in quite different ways. Yours are both definitely positive. I don't know how much more detail you want - I am a scientist so might overdo the explanation if I don't stop now!

user001 Contributor

Thanks for the details. If anyone could dumb that down into lay people language, it would be great! All I know is, the doctor called me to tell me that I probably have Celiac disease, but I have no clue how accurate she is presenting those details. Especially because I haven't eaten gluten in 4 months.

nvsmom Community Regular

The Tissue transglutam Ab IgA is the anti-tissue transglutaminase immunoglobulin A (tTG IgA) and indicates there is an attack going on in your endomysial linings of your intestines. Over 100 could be very high (like 200 or 500) or it could be 101. That does seem high to me for being gluten-free - I would suspect some cross-contamination with a number that high.

 

IgA is your total serum immunoglobulin A, which just shows how active the immune system that works in your mucosal linings are.  They test it because 5% of celiacs are deficient in IgA which would cause all IgA based tests (like the tTG IgA) to result in a false negative.

 

Your endomysial antibody titre (EMA IgA) is quite high at 1:160. I believe normally is usually 1:10 or lower. The titres are doubled each time they are run so it would go up like 1:20, 1:40, 1:80, 1:160. 1:160 is about the highest I ever see that test.  After being an untreated celiac for many decades, mine was 1:40.  The EMA IgA tends to come down faster than the tTG IgA.  You get EMA IgA testing positive when your body already has significant intestinal damage caused by tissue transglutaminase antibodies (tTG). Basically, your body senses gluten, and that the intestines are damaged, so it sends in the EMA to basically wipe out the top layer of your villi to get rid of the problem. The EMA IgA is rarely positive in early celiac disease.... or in those who eat gluten-free.

 

You definitely have celiac disease. The EMA IgA is 98-100% specific to celiac disease, meaning that 98-100% of the time, a positive test is caused by celiac disease. The tTG IgA is also highly specific to celiac disease and tends to only give (rare) false positives for those individuals with a weak positive test result... which is not you.  See this report (page 12) for more details: Open Original Shared Link

 

If those are your results after 4 months gluten-free, I would check your diet carefully for gluten.  I would guess that you are getting small amounts of gluten somewhere. Check soy sauce, worchestershire sauce, teriyaki and BBQ sauces, all seasonings, boullions, old baking supplies (like sugar that has had flour coated measuring cups dipped into it), medications, vitamins, lotions, soaps and shampoos (which could get into your mouth), snacks, and be extra careful eating out. You will need a new toaster, some new wooden spoons, and maybe a new collander or pans if they are damaged and could have gluten in the cracks.

 

Best wishes and welcome to the board.  :)

kareng Grand Master

My TTG IGA was very positive after a year. I was extremely gluten-free. My original was like yours - >100 . Who knows how over! It might have been fifty million trillion zillion. I put a link on your other thread from Celiac experts. The thing to do is to see how it goes down in 6-8 months of serious gluten-free.

And, since you were gluten-free for reasons other than Celiac, you may not have been as strict as a Celiac - took the burger off the bun, ate fries from a shared fryer, used soy sauce, ate cornflakes, etc.

user001 Contributor

That's crazy. I already have ocd and now im feeling like im going to go insane over this!

1desperateladysaved Proficient

I am so glad for you that you made this discovery even after being gluten free for 4 months!

 

Dee


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



nvsmom Community Regular

That's crazy. I already have ocd and now im feeling like im going to go insane over this!

The first few months going 100% gluten-free are a bit stressful but once you get in your groove, it gets much easier.

user001 Contributor

Most of my cookware is expensive calphalon cookware, fairly new! Is there anyway to clean it so that I can rid it on these freaking gluten particles I cannot even see?! So nerve wracking!

kareng Grand Master

Most of my cookware is expensive calphalon cookware, fairly new! Is there anyway to clean it so that I can rid it on these freaking gluten particles I cannot even see?! So nerve wracking!

Just wash it good. No big deal.

user001 Contributor

That's all? And i shouldnt be using the wooden spoons i used for pasta? and the non stick i used to use for pancakes? trash them?

kareng Grand Master

Use some common sense - can you wash it well? Get into the little cracks and clean them out? Kind of hard to do with wooden spoons and colanders - but good pans should be cleanable.

notme Experienced

check out the newbie 101 thread in the coping section of the forum.  lots of great advice and some tricks of the trade :)  welcome to the best club you never wanted to join  -_-

Fenrir Community Regular

I'm relatively new to living gluten-free but it is already part of the routine now. I've found there are a lot more foods I can have than I first thought, just learn to read labels well and go to the store and spend a few hours walking around reading labels. You'll find it isn't as hard as you first thought.

IrishHeart Veteran

I strongly suggest you get the book Real Life with Celiac Disease by Melinda Dennis and Daniel Leffler.

Tons of great advice and excellent information in there by over 50 leading celiac experts and celiac nutritionists. 

 

Read this thread:

 

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

 

What doctor just called and said "you may have celiac" like that and did not schedule a follow up or a visit with a nutritionist or other testing?

That's not very helpful at all. It's also not very definitive. 

Sounds like you need a good GI doctor to me. 

 

Do not stress out over this, okay. That does not help you heal at all. Stress creates inflammation, insomnia, all sorts of muscle pain.

Relax. breathe and know this: we all learned to adapt and so will you. In time, you may even find your "OCD" is gone.

Best wishes. 

user001 Contributor

Thanks Irish, it was s nurse practitioner, she's only there twice a week I found out, so it took me over a week to get results with the holiday. I saw a gastro yesterday, he has doubts about celiac, but claims I need an endo, which happens to be at a surgical center that he owns. :/ and said I don't need to do a gluten challenge. I'm eye rolling so hard right now. Because In my little amount of research, I know he's wrong.

IrishHeart Veteran

Thanks Irish, it was s nurse practitioner, she's only there twice a week I found out, so it took me over a week to get results with the holiday. I saw a gastro yesterday, he has doubts about celiac, but claims I need an endo, which happens to be at a surgical center that he owns. :/ and said I don't need to do a gluten challenge. I'm eye rolling so hard right now. Because In my little amount of research, I know he's wrong.

 

I do not think he is wrong at all. I think he wants to make sure you have been diagnosed properly and maybe also eliminate other conditions.

You may well still have evidence of villous blunting if your antibodies are still high. 

 

If your test results indicate celiac, why does he 'doubt" it? i do not understand. 

 

Despite some of our misadventures with the medical community, I have found that not all doctors are asshats . ^_^ My new GI/celiac doc is awesome and he uses the surgical center at his practice and he takes good care of me.  

 

it's your call of course, but I'd want to make sure i had the right DX and that nothing else was a problem. 

user001 Contributor

Im sorry, I meant he has NO doubts about the celiac.My symptoms are getting lesser as time goes on, i think i had a huge boost of healing at around 2 weeks gluten-free but its been slow going ever since because i have been eating gluten-free junk! I think i need to be really strict and just eat whole foods for now.

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - jenniber replied to jenniber's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      9

      Disaccharide deficient, confusing biopsy results, no blood test

    2. - trents replied to SamAlvi's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      High TTG-IgG and Normal TTG-IgA

    3. - xxnonamexx replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      32

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

    4. - xxnonamexx replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      32

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

    5. - SamAlvi replied to SamAlvi's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      3

      High TTG-IgG and Normal TTG-IgA

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,845
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Paulaannefthimiou
    Newest Member
    Paulaannefthimiou
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • jenniber
      thank you both for the insights. i agree, im going to back off on dairy and try sucraid. thanks for the tip about protein powder, i will look for whey protein powder/drinks!   i don’t understand why my doctor refused to order it either. so i’ve decided i’m not going to her again, and i’m going to get a second opinion with a GI recommended to me by someone with celiac. unfortunately my first appointment isn’t until February 17th. do you think i should go gluten free now or wait until after i meet with the new doctor? i’m torn about what i should do, i dont know if she is going to want to repeat the endoscopy, and i know ill have to be eating gluten to have a positive biopsy. i could always do the gluten challenge on the other hand if she does want to repeat the biopsy.    thanks again, i appreciate the support here. i’ve learned a lot from these boards. i dont know anyone in real life with celiac.
    • trents
      Let me suggest an adjustment to your terminology. "Celiac disease" and "gluten intolerance" are the same. The other gluten disorder you refer to is NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity) which is often referred to as being "gluten sensitive". Having said that, the reality is there is still much inconsistency in how people use these terms. Since celiac disease does damage to the small bowel lining it often results in nutritional deficiencies such as anemia. NCGS does not damage the small bowel lining so your history of anemia may suggest you have celiac disease as opposed to NCGS. But either way, a gluten-free diet is in order. NCGS can cause bodily damage in other ways, particularly to neurological systems.
    • xxnonamexx
      I made it through the holiday w/o being glutened. I had my brother cook with gluten-free breadcrumbs and I didn't get sick. I baked cookies with gluten-free flour and had dry ingredients for cookies in ziplock bag. I also made gluten cookies as well and guess I did good washing to avoid CC. My wife also went to a french bakery and bought a gluten-free flourless chocolate cake dedicated gluten-free it was out of this world. 
    • xxnonamexx
      What do you mean it would not allow any celiac to eat gluten again. I think if this helps cross contamination when eating out at a non dedicated gluten-free restaurant this would be nice not to encounter the pains. But is their a daily enzyme to take to help strengthen the digestive system? 
    • SamAlvi
      Hi, thank you for the reply. Unfortunately, no other antibody tests were ordered. I am a 32-year-old male. About two months ago, I ate pancakes and then developed severe diarrhea that lasted the entire day. At night, I became unconscious due to fluid loss and was admitted to the ER, where I received IV fluids. Two days later, I ate bread again and once more developed severe diarrhea. I ended up in the ER again and received IV fluids. In my country, Pakistan, doctors are unfortunately not very thorough, so they treated me for a stomach infection. I visited three or four doctors, including a gastroenterologist, but it seemed like they just wanted to keep me on medications and IV fluids. Eventually, I did some digging myself and started connecting the dots. For years, I’ve had excessive gas buildup and frequent loose stools, but I never paid much attention to it. I also cannot easily digest dairy products. Two years ago, I had a CBC test that showed iron deficiency. My doctor told me to eat more meat and said it was nothing serious. However, for the past five years, I’ve also had severe motion sickness, which I never experienced before. Whenever I get on a bus or in a car, I sometimes lose consciousness for 10–20 seconds and wake up sweaty, and occasionally I feel the need to vomit. After more research on the internet, I came across gluten and celiac disease, so I got two related tests (TTG-IgA & TTG IgG) done along with a stool test and another CBC. The stool test showed weakly positive blood. Ever since eating those pancakes and bread, I’ve had a burning sensation in my gut. My doctor reviewed my tests, he told me to completely stop eating gluten and started me on IV fluids for 20 days, saying that I had severe inflammation in my gut. It has now been two months since I quit gluten, and I’m still not sure whether this is celiac disease or gluten intolerance. I don’t really trust doctors in Pakistan, so I thought I might get some help here.
×
×
  • 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.