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

Dealing with Chronic Pain as well as Celiac-disease


Murfee

Recommended Posts

Murfee Newbie

Hello everyone! Im so very thankful to find you and read your experiences and advice! I was diagnosed a few months ago with celiac disease through a blood test. A little (uh maybe, lol) bit of history....I live in chronic pain from my body rejecting inguinal hernia mesh. The past year I started getting worse brain fog, dizziness, extreme fatigue, nauseous, serious bad diarrhea (previous I was fighting mostly constipation, with a couple days of complete opposite, could not figure out what the heck , labeled as IBS) , along with noticeable worsening depression and anxiety.....and the list goes on. ? Well, I associated all of this to my body being so tired of fighting chronic pain with no help from the medical community....other than brush you off and push onto some other Specialist. During this time I developed a rash, starting on my right for arm....then it switched to the left a month or so later! I was frantic, before disabled, I was OCD clean everything, thought for sure I had some type of bug, virus, allergy, etc.....went through everything in the house trying to figure out where the heck this rash was coming from!! Months! Until the day I Googled photos of it, ugh....along with the gut/BM issues...wow, I think I have Celiac-disease! Thank GOD my PCP sent me for a blood test....I felt myself deteriorating (still do). I went gluten-free cold turkey, man was that a seriously rough couple weeks, who would have even imagined!!! Then through all of your posts, I found about all the cookware etc - basically your entire kitchen is freaking gluten lurking!!  Oh my gosh!! And on top of everything....can we go into more debt, that'd be great, NOT!! Thank you SO very much for letting me rant, no one understands....Does anyone else also suffer chronic pain on top of this? I mean I thought I had a hard time making a meal before, not being to stand long etc....gggrrrr!! Sending ((((hugs)))) and prayers to everyone!! ??❤


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



dharwood Rookie

Hello ,

I am 5 months in and have had chronic muscle pain starting right after going gluten-free. My Dr. Claims it is fibromyalgia and has me on gabapentin but it isn't touching the pain. I am seeing her on Monday and will wean myself off of it. I seen a Dr at the VA this week and went through the pressure points and it had no effect on me. My pain is in my large muscles in my legs and arms and also joints in hands. I feel it is autoimmune issues and I get some hope and comfort (MUCH needed) when I read posts on here like yours. When I read people didn't find relief for a year or so I feel there still is hope. I spent 21 years in the Army and this has been the hardest 7 months of my life. Many times I've gone to bed and just thought, "if I just don't wake up tomorrow that would be fine with me ". Thank god for my wife, kids and grandkids. The VA Dr put in a couple referrals for the U of W, but can't promise me they will cover it. I just want to know what's causing the pain. If it's just celiac, then okay, I know in time I will heal. But if it's something else let's get busy addressing it. 

 I hope you get answers and start feeling better sooner than later. Just hang in there and be strong. It's a heck of a battle, but worth it. 

ironictruth Proficient

This came on gradually for me after a period of eating gluten in prep for biopsy. At first I did not think too much about it. But I have pain in between my shoulder blades, tender to touch, ribs/chest and knee joints.  Sometimes it feels like a dagger through my upper spine. 

Plus I get flu like aches now too. 

squirmingitch Veteran

Murfee you are just starting out, it's going to take time to heal. I had pain I can't even describe all over my body before I was dx'd. The longer I was gluten free, the more pain went away. I was 54 & had lower back pain since my teens. I lived with it. I don't live with it anymore. It's so bizarre to me that my back doesn't hurt anymore after a lifetime of gnawing pain. I never imagined that would resolve from going gluten free. It still amazes me.

As to your body rejecting the hernia mesh, that was before you were dx'd right? You just might find that your body will not reject it if you get it re-done after being gluten-free for a good while. For celiacs, gluten causes body wide inflammation so you will likely be surprised at the things that will resolve for you.

Hang in there!

Murfee Newbie
21 hours ago, dharwood said:

Hello ,

I am 5 months in and have had chronic muscle pain starting right after going gluten-free. My Dr. Claims it is fibromyalgia and has me on gabapentin but it isn't touching the pain. I am seeing her on Monday and will wean myself off of it. I seen a Dr at the VA this week and went through the pressure points and it had no effect on me. My pain is in my large muscles in my legs and arms and also joints in hands. I feel it is autoimmune issues and I get some hope and comfort (MUCH needed) when I read posts on here like yours. When I read people didn't find relief for a year or so I feel there still is hope. I spent 21 years in the Army and this has been the hardest 7 months of my life. Many times I've gone to bed and just thought, "if I just don't wake up tomorrow that would be fine with me ". Thank god for my wife, kids and grandkids. The VA Dr put in a couple referrals for the U of W, but can't promise me they will cover it. I just want to know what's causing the pain. If it's just celiac, then okay, I know in time I will heal. But if it's something else let's get busy addressing it. 

 I hope you get answers and start feeling better sooner than later. Just hang in there and be strong. It's a heck of a battle, but worth it. 

Thank you, I hope you can get some answers asap! I have been experiencing the deep muscle aches also since going gluten-free! Just forearms and tops of thighs....it only seems to happen when I've got poisoned...and just off and on. What an awful disease! ❤

cristiana Veteran

I got all sorts of weird pains after going gluten free. One nasty pain was to do with my sacroiliac joints which apparently often affects celiacs but it seemed to refer to my groin, my lower back, my abdomen. It was there much of the time but played up particularly badly when I walked, which was a pain in itself as I love walking. Now I am grateful to say it is much better - it was probably at its worse six months after diagnosis, and it hung around for a few months.  

My own pre-DX journey was horrid, and I wonder sometimes if the pain and other weird symptoms came about partly a response to months of stress.  Also, I think with chronic pain you end up with a bit of a viscious circle -  you get the pain, you tense up, it makes the pain worse, etc. 

One thing that I found helped was having a warm bath with Epsom Salts.  I was told by someone to put a good amount in a bath for about 20 minutes (with no other products) and have a good soak.  I'd recommend it.

Open Original Shared Link

 

ironictruth Proficient
9 hours ago, cristiana said:

I got all sorts of weird pains after going gluten free. One nasty pain was to do with my sacroiliac joints which apparently often affects celiacs but it seemed to refer to my groin, my lower back, my abdomen. It was there much of the time but played up particularly badly when I walked, which was a pain in itself as I love walking. Now I am grateful to say it is much better - it was probably at its worse six months after diagnosis, and it hung around for a few months.  

My own pre-DX journey was horrid, and I wonder sometimes if the pain and other weird symptoms came about partly a response to months of stress.  Also, I think with chronic pain you end up with a bit of a viscious circle -  you get the pain, you tense up, it makes the pain worse, etc. 

One thing that I found helped was having a warm bath with Epsom Salts.  I was told by someone to put a good amount in a bath for about 20 minutes (with no other products) and have a good soak.  I'd recommend it.

Open Original Shared Link

 

I am totally doing this tonight!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



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. - trents replied to Scott Adams's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      46

      Supplements for those Diagnosed with Celiac Disease

    2. - trents replied to Woodster991's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      10

      Is it gluten?

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

      nothing has changed

    4. - asaT replied to wellthatsfun's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      3

      nothing has changed

    5. - nanny marley replied to SilkieFairy's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      7

      IBS-D vs Celiac

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

    • Total Members
      133,342
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

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

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      You may also need to supplement with B12 as this vitamin is also involved in iron assimilation and is often deficient in long-term undiagnosed celiac disease.
    • trents
      @par18, no, Scott's use of the term "false negative" is intentional and appropriate. The "total IGA" test is not a test used to diagnose celiac disease per se. The IGA immune spectrum response encompasses more than just celiac disease. So, "total IGA" refers to the whole pie, not just the celiac response part of it. But if the whole pie is deficient, the spectrum of components making it up will likely be also, including the celiac disease response spectrum. In other words, IGA deficiency may produce a tTG-IGA score that is negative that might have been positive had there not been IGA deficiency. So, the tTG-IGA negative score may be "false", i.e, inaccurate, aka, not to be trusted.
    • RMJ
      This may be the problem. Every time you eat gluten it is like giving a booster shot to your immune system, telling it to react and produce antibodies again.
    • asaT
      Scott, I am mostly asymptomatic. I was diagnosed based on high antibodies, low ferritin (3) and low vitamin D (10). I wasn't able to get in for the biopsy until 3 months after the blood test came back. I was supposed to keep eating gluten during this time. Well why would I continue doing something that I know to be harmful for 3 more months to just get this test? So I did quit gluten and had the biopsy. It was negative for celiacs. I continued gluten free with iron supps and my ferritin came back up to a reasonable, but not great level of around 30-35.  Could there be something else going on? Is there any reason why my antibodies would be high (>80) with a negative biopsy? could me intestines have healed that quickly (3 months)?  I'm having a hard time staying gluten free because I am asymptomatic and i'm wondering about that biopsy. I do have the celiacs gene, and all of the antibody tests have always come back high. I recently had them tested again. Still very high. I am gluten free mostly, but not totally. I will occasionally eat something with gluten, but try to keep to a minimum. It's really hard when the immediate consequences are nil.  with high antibodies, the gene, but a negative biopsy (after 3 months strict gluten-free), do i really have celiacs? please say no. lol. i think i know the answer.  Asa
    • nanny marley
      I have had a long year of testing unfortunately still not diagnosed , although one thing they definitely agree I'm gluten intolerant, the thing for me I have severe back troubles they wouldnt perform the tests and I couldn't have a full MRI because I'm allergic to the solution , we tryed believe me  I tryed lol , another was to have another blood test after consuming gluten but it makes me so bad I tryed it for only a week, and because I have a trapped sciatic nerve when I get bad bowels it sets that off terribly so I just take it on myself now , I eat a gluten free diet , I'm the best I've ever been , and if I slip I know it so for me i have my own diagnosis  and I act accordingly, sometimes it's not so straight forward for some of us , for the first time in years I can plan to go out , and I have been absorbing my food better , running to the toilet has become occasionally now instead of all the time , i hope you find a solution 🤗
×
×
  • 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.