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

Positive Blood work


CMC74

Recommended Posts

CMC74 Rookie

Hi, 

I am new here and I apologize if this has been answered before.  Over the past 4 years my doctor has tested me for the IGA antibiodies (I think that is it) during my annual physical and my blood work has come back positive 3 times out of 4.  I don't have any gastrointestinal symptoms but she has told me to stay off of gluten since I have headaches and some other minor issues.  When I recently looked at the patient portal my chart said "Celiac" on it. I know it can't be confirmed without a biopsy, but I am scared to death to do it and would rather just stay gluten free. 

I was just wondering if anyone else has had several positive blood results and ended up not having Celiac?  

Thank you!

 

 


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ravenwoodglass Mentor

Welcome to the board. The celiac blood tests are pretty specific to celiac. Doctors are starting to acknowledge that positive blood work is diagnostic. While ideally you should have had an endoscopy after you had positive blood your doctor may have feared that you would show a false negative on the endo. You could go back on gluten for a couple months and get an endo done but you do risk that false negative and with repeat positive IGA tests it is pretty certain you are celiac. Celiac has a lot of different symptoms and there are people with celiac that never have tummy issues that they consider abnormal.  Those minor issues could become more major if you ignoser the postive blood work you have had. Do read the Newbie 101 thread at the top of the coping section as it has a lot of good info on what you need to do to keep safe and healthy.

GFinDC Veteran

Hi cmc74,

I wrote post to you earlier but it seems to have disappeared.

You can ask your doctor to do the full celiac disease test panel, including the DGP IgA and DGP IgG now.  They are very specific tests for gliaden antibodies.  Often a doctor will do just the ttg IgA screening test, but there are more tests.

CMC74 Rookie

Thank you both.  The patient portal is down, but if I can access it I can see exactly what blood work has been done. I will also read the newbie section. 

squirmingitch Veteran

How long have you been gluten free? How many years ago did your doc tell you to stay off gluten? I'm just wondering because it's not clear in your original post. Have you been gluten-free for 4 years? You say for 3 out of 4 years the IgA has come back positive. Which year was it negative?

For an endoscopy you have to eat gluten every day for 2 weeks.

CMC74 Rookie
2 hours ago, squirmingitch said:

How long have you been gluten free? How many years ago did your doc tell you to stay off gluten? I'm just wondering because it's not clear in your original post. Have you been gluten-free for 4 years? You say for 3 out of 4 years the IgA has come back positive. Which year was it negative?

For an endoscopy you have to eat gluten every day for 2 weeks.

Well, I have been on and off the gluten free diet over the past 4 years. I think I generally do 4-5 months then cave around the holidays and also in the summer when we travel overseas for a month I end up eating gluten then go back to gluten-free when I get home.  I  also lose weight on the gluten-free diet which I don't need to do and a reason why I start eating everything again.  After my yearly physicals when I get the reminder my blood work is still positive and I could get cancer if I continue to eat gluten I stop again. Since I don't react when I do eat gluten it makes it a bit harder.  The first year (4 years ago) my doctor did a test which was positive and she repeated it to make sure, the next year she checked again - still positive,  year after that it was negative then next time it was positive again.   

In the meantime, I had some other symptoms such as abnormal hearing loss, which led to blood work resulting in a positive ANA.  I followed up a few months later and had a positive (or maybe borderline) 6 result for Lupus.  Both should be positive at the same time I was told and mine were not. Either way, I go to the Rheumotologist on Dec. 16th for possible Lupus too.   I now plan to stay gluten free since there are too many indicators that I have Celiac.  I am 42 by the way and no family history that I know of. 

 

zenjess1980 Contributor

I also have positive blood work, but ended up having negative biopsy. I literally had a doctor tell me "I don't quite understand your results. You'll probably be fine continuing to eat gluten."

... and so began a long journey. VERY long story short, I ended up getting duodenal non Hodgkin lymphoma (cancer) which is apparently related to untreated Celiac Disease! Imagine my shock, anger, disappointment, etc.!

From what I understand the blood work they do is very specific to diagnosing Celiac. I am not certain if you can get a false positive. Perhaps others can help you out and answer that for you.

In the end, I say better to be safe than sorry! *hugs* Best wishes!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



CMC74 Rookie
10 minutes ago, zenjess1980 said:

I also have positive blood work, but ended up having negative biopsy. I literally had a doctor tell me "I don't quite understand your results. You'll probably be fine continuing to eat gluten."

... and so began a long journey. VERY long story short, I ended up getting duodenal non Hodgkin lymphoma (cancer) which is apparently related to untreated Celiac Disease! Imagine my shock, anger, disappointment, etc.!

From what I understand the blood work they do is very specific to diagnosing Celiac. I am not certain if you can get a false positive. Perhaps others can help you out and answer that for you.

In the end, I say better to be safe than sorry! *hugs* Best wishes!

I'm sorry that happened. I hope you are in remission now and doing well. It is very confusing and doctors are often not clear enough. My doctor responded to me with this " I got your labs everything looks great except you are still gluten allergic. Thus I would highly recommend off all gluten as those people who are gluten allergic can actually develop a rare form of small intestine cancer with persistant use. So I would be careful. "  

She has never been clear that the blood work is very specific and says to "be careful."  She also told me the ONLY  way to confirm is with a biopsy.  I am grateful for this forum and the input I have been getting.  I am scared to death of cancer since my Dad died of esophageal cancer (who know if he has celiacs or not!?) and my aunt and uncle also from cancer within one year of each other.  I plan to now stay gluten-free for life and also get my 6 year old daughter tested - she throws up more than any child I have ever heard of and it all started when she began eating real food at 9 months old :-(

Thanks again!

 

zenjess1980 Contributor

Thanks. And yes I am 2 years Cancer free -- on December 16th, and doing pretty well :)

 

Yea, it's a shame doctors aren't more clear on these things and do not have clear communication either! I have to say this forum has been a fantastic help. I'm glad you are staying gluten free!!!! Best wishes to you and your daughter!

CMC74 Rookie
7 minutes ago, zenjess1980 said:

Thanks. And yes I am 2 years Cancer free -- on December 16th, and doing pretty well :)

 

Yea, it's a shame doctors aren't more clear on these things and do not have clear communication either! I have to say this forum has been a fantastic help. I'm glad you are staying gluten free!!!! Best wishes to you and your daughter!

That's fantastic. Congratulations! And, thank you very much :-) 

cyclinglady Grand Master
16 minutes ago, CMC74 said:

I'm sorry that happened. I hope you are in remission now and doing well. It is very confusing and doctors are often not clear enough. My doctor responded to me with this " I got your labs everything looks great except you are still gluten allergic. Thus I would highly recommend off all gluten as those people who are gluten allergic can actually develop a rare form of small intestine cancer with persistant use. So I would be careful. "  

She has never been clear that the blood work is very specific and says to "be careful."  She also told me the ONLY  way to confirm is with a biopsy.  I am grateful for this forum and the input I have been getting.  I am scared to death of cancer since my Dad died of esophageal cancer (who know if he has celiacs or not!?) and my aunt and uncle also from cancer within one year of each other.  I plan to now stay gluten-free for life and also get my 6 year old daughter tested - she throws up more than any child I have ever heard of and it all started when she began eating real food at 9 months old :-(

Thanks again!

 

Just make  sure you daughter gets the complete panel.   Often  providers only allow first-line doctors (GP, PCP) to only order the TTG tests.  Kids often test better on the DGP.  That may mean insisting on a GI referral.  This should not be an issue since  you had positives.  You can see why now that an endoscopy can help in more ways than one (firm diagnosis and thrfore helping first degree relatives, etc).  

CMC74 Rookie

Will do.  My Mom is overseas and has had issues all her life and is planning to get tested too. I thought she had been tested because she went in and had several scopes but no biopsy, just a "visual inspection! "  Kind of unbelievable! 

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,340
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Rachel Hill
    Newest Member
    Rachel Hill
    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

    • trents
      My reaction to a gluten bolus exposure is similar to yours, with 2-3 hours of severe abdominal cramps and intractable emesis followed by several hours of diarrhea. I don't necessarily equate that one large exposure to gluten with significant intestinal lining damage, however. I think it's just a violent reaction to a what the body perceives to be a somewhat toxic substance that I am no longer tolerant of because I have quit exposing myself to it regularly. It's just the body purging itself of it rather than an expression of significant damage. Before diagnosis, when I was consuming gluten daily, I had little to no GI distress. I was, for the most part, a "silent celiac". The damage to my small bowel lining didn't happen all at once but was slow and insidious, accumulating over a period of years. The last time I got a big shot of gluten was about three years ago when I got my wife's wheat biscuits mixed up with my gluten-free ones. There was this acute reaction after about two hours of ingestion as I described above. I felt washed out for a few days and fully recovered within a week or so.  Now, I'm a 74-year-old male. So, I'm not worried about being pregnant. And I don't want to contradict your physicians advice. But I just don't think you have done significant damage to your small bowel lining by one episode of significant gluten ingestion. I just don't think it works that way.
    • Skydawg
      Wondering about some thoughts on how long to wait to try to get pregnant after a gluten exposure?  I have been diagnosed for 10 years and have followed the diet strictly. I have been cross contaminated before, but have never had a full on gluten exposure. I went to a restaurant recently, and the waiter messed up and gave me regular bread and told me it was gluten free. 2 hours later I was throwing up for the whole evening. I have never had that kind of reaction before as I have never had such a big exposure. My husband and I were planning to start trying to get pregnant this month. My dr did blood work to check for electrolytes and white blood cells, but did not do a full nutritional panel. Most of my GI symptoms have resolved in the past 2 weeks, but I am definitely still dealing with brain fog, fatigue and headaches. My dr has recommended I wait 3 months before I start to try to get pregnant.   I have read else where about how long it can take for the intestine to fully heal, and the impacts gluten exposure can have on pregnancy. I guess I am really wondering if anyone has had a similar experience? How long does it take to heal after 1 exposure like that, after following the diet so well for 10 years? Is 3 months an okay amount of time to wait? Is there anything I can do in the meantime to reduce my symptoms? 
    • ShadowLoom
      I’ve used tinctures and made my own edibles with gluten-free ingredients to stay safe. Dispensary staff don’t always know about gluten, so I double-check labels or just make my own.
    • Scott Adams
      It's great to hear that there are some good doctors out there, and this is an example of why having a formal diagnosis can definitely be helpful.
    • RMJ
      Update: I have a wonderful new gastroenterologist. She wants to be sure there’s nothing more serious, like refractory celiac, going on. She ordered various tests including some micronutrient tests that no one has ever ordered before.  I’m deficient in folate and zinc and starting supplements for both. I’m so glad I decided to go to a new GI!
×
×
  • Create New...