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

cristiana

Recommended Posts

cristiana Veteran

In the international room, JMG and I have been talking about the unexplained eye symptoms that we have had that we believe has been a result of gluten damage.

We wanted to know if anyone has had eye symptoms which the medical profession have either diagnosed or have, you feel, mis-diagnosed.  I have had aura migraines in both eyes in the past but about three years ago I started to get sparkles in my right eye only which matched this pic of a scintillating scotoma, except the pretty sparkles were limited only to the centre of my eye and never took over my vision.  It lasted about ten minutes and there was no headache afterwards.  No temporary blindness either.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scintillating_scotoma#/media/File:ScintillatingScotoma3.webp

Now I get odd bright lights either in a horizontal line or sometimes in a circle, both affecting my central vision, when I have been doing a lot of paperwork or screen work, or sometimes just after straining to look downwards with my right eye.   It can go a bit weird in my central vision, hard to describe as I can see past it - almost like looking through raindrops on glass.  T I only notice it in certain light conditions.    I notice that it goes away very quickly afterwards.  I have had retinal scans, which were perfect.  Diabetes tests and cholestoral tests.  All fine. I had an MRI when I started to get tinnitus just before the scotomas started and it was fine.

I've been told it is another variant of migraine but I'm not so sure as I can't see these lights when my eyes are closed and it only ever effects the one eye.  JMG and I have been wondering if maybe what we have is damage to the optic nerve - neuritis.  

Has anyone else had anything similar?

 

 

 


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ironictruth Proficient

I had migraines as a kid, floaters developed at age of 23 after some visual disturbances and have recently developed migraines again. I also had stabbing pains in my eyes, but my eye doc said that was due to dry eye caused by xanax most likely. 

But I am not dx. Some conflicting antibody blood work, DQ2, and non specific intestinal inflammation. 

Jmg Mentor

I experience moments where my eyesight is obscured by grey patches. Sometimes it's just a small patch, at other times its like I'm in a grey tunnel with just a small part of my vision in one eye available. They don't last too long, maybe a couple of minutes. Once I excluded gluten they all but disappeared. I have experienced them rarely since and have put this down to a bout of cross contamination or inadvertant exposure. I'm using a shared kitchen and recently Christmas meant my risk level was up.

My best guess is optic neuritis. I hope its just gluten affected and not a precursor of MS! 

cristiana Veteran

Thank you for posting your experiences. I hope others might chime in, but meantime I found this old article which gives me hope that what I have is to do with celiac disease, although I find it unnerving (excuse the pun) that it could be nerve damage and that it might get worse.

My optician seems pretty unconcerned which I should be glad about but I don't like these episodes because to me they aren't like my previous aura migraines that I could see with my eyes closed.  But then again, if the water on glass effect that I get - i.e. feel like I'm looking through a windscreen with raindrops on it, has been described as something migraine sufferers get. What I find odd is that I can't see the water droplets when I'm in the dark or with my eyes closed - only in certain light conditions.  That is so unlike my previous aura migraines.

Open Original Shared Link

manasota Explorer

Cristiana,

I had symptoms almost exactly how you described in our original post, when I was 12 years old.  I was terrified.  Nobody else seemed concerned.  Luckily, this only lasted a year.   I developed classic migraine symptoms when I was 26 years old.  These lasted for decades.  Way back then, migraines were dismissed as merely "headaches" that were likely my fault because I was "tense".    Ignorance is bliss???????

Eventually, the migraines stopped.  Not sure why.  Maybe old age.  (I am now 67 years old.  Hooray I made it!!)  Maybe acupuncture.  No idea.

At this point in time, I still have plenty of eye-related symptoms (redness, swelling, watery discharge, etc.).  However, I have recently been diagnosed with a Mast Cell Disorder and believe this is the current cause of my eye problems (and many other problems as well).  Going gluten free did very little to remedy my symptoms.

Not sure if this is any help for you.  I can say I had similar issues that didn't kill me or blind me.  I guess all you can do is seek medical advice, research on your own, and keep trying everything.  Sorry I could not be more help.

Oh, my best advice is to LISTEN MOSTLY TO YOURSELF!  YOU KNOW YOUR BODY BETTER THAN ANYBODY!  Yes, get good medical advice; but, in the end, YOU be the judge.

Sending you hugs because that is all I have to give you.

cristiana Veteran

Hello  Manasota.

I am truly grateful to you for taking the time to write. It is comforting to me that your eye symptoms that resembled mine passed, although it seems you have much else to deal with - I am sorry.  The thing I find very difficult as a celiac is that our condition could explain so much, and yet could always be something else!  

Did you have the water on glass type migraine, out of interest?

JMG - I am wondering if sharing a kitchen could be causing CC issues.  I think I'm going to try to pay more attention there.

Jmg Mentor
18 hours ago, cristiana said:

JMG - I am wondering if sharing a kitchen could be causing CC issues.  I think I'm going to try to pay more attention there.

I think so, firstly no matter how careful others are it's never in their minds as much as it is for me. Plus gluten is so ubiquitous there's just so many ways it can get into things.  When I have something now, like the eye thing I got again for first time in while recently I can't often pin it down to one thing. It could just be a wooden spoon used in cooking something gluten-free  or a baking tray, crumb in a wooden chopping board etc etc.

 


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



cristiana Veteran
41 minutes ago, Jmg said:

I think so, firstly no matter how careful others are it's never in their minds as much as it is for me. Plus gluten is so ubiquitous there's just so many ways it can get into things.  When I have something now, like the eye thing I got again for first time in while recently I can't often pin it down to one thing. It could just be a wooden spoon used in cooking something gluten-free  or a baking tray, crumb in a wooden chopping board etc etc.

 

I think I need to take this all much more seriously.  Strange as I have a couple of celiac friends who sail very close to the wind and don't take all these precautions and seem to be fine. Whereas I get all this odd stuff and try to tell everyone why I am being careful and they think I'm being silly.  I suppose the only real way to be absolutely sure is to go completely whole food and be very scruplulous about the kitchen environment.  The symptoms we have could be or could not be gluten, that is the question, (wonder if Shakespeare was a celiac) and I guess the only way for me to really find out is to become much more careful in 2017.

I was listening to a Radio 4 programme a while back and they said in the production process of one of those hot chocolate drinks (they didn't name a brand) the product or its ingredients might go through 25 different processes - lots of room for CC, I thought to myself, knocking back the Chocolate Options drink.

Jmg Mentor

Like you say there are some celiacs who seem to be ok with being adventurous. Sometimes it seems foolhardy, like the guy I know who cheerfully drinks lager now because 'his stomach has healed'  At other times I envy them for being more carefree.I think of it as a balancing act. I don't want to get so paranoid about it that I never eat out etc but I also have to keep a handle on just what I'm eating. 

I dont have a celiac diagnosis to fall back on. One of the things which stops me taking risks is that my primary symptoms are neurological, take time to disappear and make me feel miserable! I just dont want to feel that way again, ever...

Having said all that I still allow myself gluten-free baked stuff, rice, corn etc. I was half thinking about cutting all those out for awhile and seeing how I felt then. But a life without treats doesn't sound much fun... 

cristiana Veteran
18 hours ago, Jmg said:

I dont have a celiac diagnosis to fall back on. One of the things which stops me taking risks is that my primary symptoms are neurological, take time to disappear and make me feel miserable! I just dont want to feel that way again, ever...

Yes, I imagine not having a diagnosis is difficult. A friend of mine doesn't have celiac disease (she had all the tests) but her awful neurological symptoms are now getting better as a result of a gluten free diet that she took up to keep someone else company.  So it just shows how important that people who have neurological problems look into celiac disease and then even if they don't have it come off gluten for a bit to see if that might be behind it.

And I so agree about treats!

 

Jmg Mentor

This:

 

1 hour ago, cristiana said:

So it just shows how important that people who have neurological problems look into celiac disease and then even if they don't have it come off gluten for a bit to see if that might be behind it.

is so spot on. I'm worried sometimes on here when I'm reading people that have got a negative celiac test and immediately they discount gluten, despite having symptoms that fit the profile very closely. I think one of the problems is that Gastroenterologists are supervising the diagnostic process and if Celiac is excluded then they feel their task it at an end. It's the same mindset that I ran into years ago when I was in hospital for chest pains. Once the cardiologist excluded my heart they effectively told me to ignore the pain and live with it. That cost me 20 years of sometimes terrifying pain, not to mention all the other symptoms. There doesn't seem to be much holistic medicine practised sadly?

It's funny, I was almost disappointed when the biopsy came back negative :D At least, I'd thought, with a positive diagnosis I'd be in some way validated, especially as so much of the symptoms are internal and can't be seen or easily demonstrated. Afterwards I realised that I'd attached too much importance to the validation of others. 

I still have doubts as to whether the NHS screening tackled all the markers that could've identified coealiac (back to UK spelling for a fellow Brit), whether the 4 biopsies taken were sufficient or of a capsule endoscopy may have given another reading but in the end life's too short. I'd already made the decision to give up gluten and the gastro endorsed that and promised to write it up in my records. So there wasn't much to be gained other than the approval of the medical establishment and these days I don't care so much for their opinions as I once did! :rolleyes:

I suspect eventually Celiac, Gluten Sensitivity / Intolerance and Gluten Ataxia will all be understood as subsets of a wider issue between gluten and humans. The latter two are just a bit further down the road for medical science and the tests or general awareness isn't there yet. So I'm quite happy telling a waiter that I'm celiac as that way I'll get the absolute no messing about gluten free food that I need.  As it turns out the neurological symptoms are more common with non celiac gluten intolerance in any case. 

 

cristiana Veteran
1 hour ago, Jmg said:

Hear, hear. 

It must be incredibly tough for people who haven't got coeliac disease to fall back on in restaurant situations, etc.  

Re: the the person I know with neurological problems that I just mentioned.  I seem to remember I suggested she came off gluten some time before she actually did but she was a bit sceptical.   What finally brought it about was a personal situation where she needed to come off gluten to help a friend out that had coeliac disease.  It was extraordinary as within weeks all sorts of nasty symptoms started to disappear.  She then started eating gluten again and they came back with a vengeance.

It is quite incredible the difference this has made to her life - I certainly hope the medical profession are pooling this information somewhere.

 

 

1 hour ago, Jmg said:

 As it turns out the neurological symptoms are more common with non celiac gluten intolerance in any case. 

 

 

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,855
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Tara M
    Newest Member
    Tara M
    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

    • cristiana
      @Colleen H   I am just curious,  when you were tested for coeliac disease, did the doctors find out if you had any deficiencies? Sometimes muscle pain can be caused by certain deficiencies, for example, magnesium, vitamin D, calcium, and potassium.   Might be worth looking into having some more tests.  Pins and needles can be neuropathy, again caused by deficiencies, such as iron and B12,  which can be reversed if these deficiencies are addressed. In the UK where I live we are usually only tested for iron, B12 and vitamin D deficiencies at diagnosis.   I was very iron anemic and supplementation made a big difference.  B12 was low normal, but in other countries the UK's low normal would be considered a deficiency.  My vitamin D was low normal, and I've been supplementing ever since (when I remember to take it!) My pins and needles definitely started to improve when my known deficiencies were addressed.  My nutritionist also gave me a broad spectrum supplement which really helped, because I suspect I wasn't just deficient in what I mention above but in many other vitamins and minerals.  But a word of warning, don't take iron unless blood tests reveal you actually need it, and if you are taking it your levels must be regularly monitored because too much can make you ill.  (And if you are currently taking iron, that might actually be making your stomach sore - it did mine, so my GP changed my iron supplementation to a gentler form, ferrous gluconate). Lastly, have you been trying to take anything to lessen the pain in your gut?  I get a sore stomach periodically, usually when I've had too much rich food, or when I have had to take an aspirin or certain antibiotics, or after glutening.  When this happens, I take for just a few days a small daily dose of OTC omeprazole.  I also follow a reflux or gastritis diet. There are lots online but the common denominators to these diets is you need to cut out caffeine, alcohol, rich, spicy, acidic food etc and eat small regularly spaced meals.   When I get a sore stomach, I also find it helpful to drink lots of water.  I also find hot water with a few slices of ginger very soothing to sip, or camomile tea.  A wedge pillow at night is good for reflux. Also,  best not to eat a meal 2-3 hours before going to bed. If the stomach pain is getting worse, though, it would be wise to see the doctor again. I hope some of this helps. Cristiana    
    • Me,Sue
      I was diagnosed with coeliac disease a couple of years ago [ish]. I love my food and a variety of food, so it's been hard, as it is with everyone. I try and ensure everything I eat doesn't contain gluten, but occasionally I think something must have got through that has gluten in. Mainly I know because I have to dash to the loo, but recently I have noticed that I feel nauseous after possibly being glutened. I think the thing that I have got better at is knowing what to do when I feel wiped out after a gluten 'episode'. I drink loads of water, and have just started drinking peppermint tea. I also have rehydration powders to drink. I don't feel like eating much, but eventually feel like I need to eat. Gluten free flapjacks, or gluten free cereal, or a small gluten free kids meal are my go to. I am retired, so luckily I can rest, sometimes even going to bed when nothing else works. So I feel that I am getting better at knowing how to try and get back on track. I am also trying to stick to a simpler menu and eat mostly at home so that I can be more confident about what I am eating. THANKS TO THOSE WHO REPLIED ABOUT THE NAUSEA .
    • Francis M
      Thanks. Since the back and forth and promises of review and general stalling went on for more than six months, the credit company will no longer investigate. They have a cutoff of maybe six months.
    • Scott Adams
      Is this the same restaurant? https://www.facebook.com/TheHappyTartFallsChurch/ Is it too late to take this up with your credit card company? Normally you have a few months to do a chargeback with them. It seems very odd that they are taking this approach with someone who is likely to be a regular customer--not a good business-minded way of handling things!
    • Scott Adams
      Many people with celiac disease, especially those who are in the 0-2 year range of their recovery, have additional food intolerance issues which could be temporary. To figure this out you may need to keep a food diary and do an elimination diet over a few months. Some common food intolerance issues are dairy/casein, eggs, corn, oats, and soy. The good news is that after your gut heals (for most people who are 100% gluten-free this will take several months to two years) you may be able to slowly add some these items back into your diet after the damaged villi heal. This article may be helpful: The most common nutrient deficiencies associated with celiac disease that may lead to testing for the condition include iron, vitamin D, folate (vitamin B9), vitamin B12, calcium, zinc, and magnesium.  Unfortunately many doctors, including my own doctor at the time, don't do extensive follow up testing for a broad range of nutrient deficiencies, nor recommend that those just diagnosed with celiac disease take a broad spectrum vitamin/mineral supplement, which would greatly benefit most, if not all, newly diagnosed celiacs. Because of this it took me decades to overcome a few long-standing issues I had that were associated with gluten ataxia, for example numbness and tingling in my feet, and muscle knots--especially in my shoulders an neck. Only long term extensive supplementation has helped me to resolve these issues.        
×
×
  • 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.