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

Just a TTG?


Fbmb

Recommended Posts

Fbmb Rising Star

Hi Everyone,

So I've been gluten free for 8 months and was diagnosed back in November. I had my TTG done at my local health fair and had an endoscopy to follow, which showed that I had stage 3b damage. I didn't have many symptoms.

My TTG was >100. It was super high. My GI didn't suggest that we do a full celiac panel, and at the time I didn't realize that there were more tests to run. I didn't get the DGP or anything else. Just the TTG. In January, after 2 months, my TTG was sitting at a 12. So I guess that shows that being gluten free lowered it significantly.

I guess I'm concerned that they didn't do the other tests. Are those tests necessary? Could anything else have caused that kind of intestinal damage, aside from Celiac? My pathology report says that it's consistent with Celiac but that it should be taken into consideration with all of my other tests, etc.

It's too late now to do a panel, I know. But I'm an anxious person by nature and this has me wondering if my diagnosis was correct, or if I could have another AI disease that caused the TTG to be high like that. I know that some other AI disorders are exacerbated by gluten, so I am concerned that stopping gluten could have just helped a potential other disorder (and caused a decrease in my TTG). But my GI told me that other AI disorders wouldn't cause a TTG to be that high - he said that's significant and that Celiac would be what would cause an off the charts TTG like that. I trust him, but I wish I had asked more questions. Now I feel like I don't have a definitive diagnosis. And I didn't really have symptoms, so it's hard to know if I feel a whole lot different being gluten free. I also know I'm still early in my healing. Maybe I'm just being nuts. Again.

I guess the way to know is to have a follow-up endoscopy done in November to see if I'm healing? Am I worrying needlessly? Have others just had the TTG? 

:(

I should point out, I had the TTG/IGA, not just a TTG. 


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



cyclinglady Grand Master

I think you are fine.  Your GI followed the normal algorithm and your case fit that algorithm perfectly.  

Open Original Shared Link

Consider yourself lucky.  Your GI sounds competent!  

It is up to you and your doctor to decide if you want a follow-up endoscopy.  I think long-time member,  Peter waited five years and was completely healed.  Based on my research, one year is too soon for a follow-up because most folks take more than a year to heal.  What if you still have some villi damage?  What do you gain from that?  Are you just a slow healer or will your doctor think you are not sticking to the diet?    For me, I would feel discouraged!  But it should be done if you have not had any symptom improvement at all.  Something else could be going on (e.g. SIBO, IBD, etc).  Antibody testing should be sufficient along with a reduction in symptoms as a gauge for healing for many celiacs (not all, because some are seronegative and some are asymptomatic).  

 

Fbmb Rising Star
9 minutes ago, cyclinglady said:

I think you are fine.  Your GI followed the normal algorithm and your case fit that algorithm perfectly.  

Open Original Shared Link

Consider yourself lucky.  Your GI sounds competent!  

It is up to you and your doctor to decide if you want a follow-up endoscopy.  I think long-time member,  Peter waited five years and was completely healed.  Based on my research, one year is too soon for a follow-up because most folks take more than a year to heal.  What if you still have some villi damage?  What do you gain from that?  Are you just a slow healer or will your doctor think you are not sticking to the diet?    For me, I would feel discouraged!  But it should be done if you have not had any symptom improvement at all.  Something else could be going on (e.g. SIBO, IBD, etc).  Antibody testing should be sufficient along with a reduction in symptoms as a gauge for healing for many celiacs (not all, because some are seronegative and some are asymptomatic).  

 

The alogrithm still lists the other tests as part of the total blood workup though, right? Maybe I'm not reading it correctly. 

Its hard to say if I have symptom improvement because I wasn't very symptomatic before. And I do still have some weird days. 

Fbmb Rising Star
55 minutes ago, cyclinglady said:

I think you are fine.  Your GI followed the normal algorithm and your case fit that algorithm perfectly.  

Open Original Shared Link

Consider yourself lucky.  Your GI sounds competent!  

It is up to you and your doctor to decide if you want a follow-up endoscopy.  I think long-time member,  Peter waited five years and was completely healed.  Based on my research, one year is too soon for a follow-up because most folks take more than a year to heal.  What if you still have some villi damage?  What do you gain from that?  Are you just a slow healer or will your doctor think you are not sticking to the diet?    For me, I would feel discouraged!  But it should be done if you have not had any symptom improvement at all.  Something else could be going on (e.g. SIBO, IBD, etc).  Antibody testing should be sufficient along with a reduction in symptoms as a gauge for healing for many celiacs (not all, because some are seronegative and some are asymptomatic).  

 

Ok, now I'm seeing what you're seeing. They didn't check my IGA alone before I had the TTG. So I don't know what that level was by itself. I assume if you're deficient in IGA that your TTG would be lower, yes? Since it says TTG/IGA I assume it's TTG AND IGA. Right? I'm no genius though. And I certainly don't know anything about science or lab work. I'm just a communication major. :) 

cyclinglady Grand Master

The algorithm starts with the TTG.  If very positive (like yours was), it tells the GI that the next step is an endoscopy/biopsies.  If the biopsies are positive, the diagnosis is celiac disease.  If the TTG is negative, the GI can assume that 1) either celiac disease is NOT likely or 2) order additional tests if he still suspects celiac disease.  

On this forum, many of us push for the complete panel.  Why?  Because the TTG dies not catch all celiacs.  Your case is a perfect text book case of celiac disease.  You were fortunate in the sense that you got a diagnosis and should have no doubt.  Even now, you reported that your TTG has since dropped significantly while on a gluten diet.  That is fantastic!  It also helps solidify without a doubt that you have celiac disease.

Now, the hardest part is recovery.  It takes so long.  Sometimes neurological issues never resolve as the damage is too great, but that is rare.  Again, we are lucky to know the trigger for a flare-up.   Who knows what really sets off lupus or MS?  

Every celiac will have off days -- even weeks.    It happens.  We all have different issues aside from celiac disease.  Those are going to impact our recovery too.  

I was really only anemic when I was diagnosed.  I could not believe the one positive on I had on the celiac panel was accurate.  I did not want to have celiac disease.  Heck, hubby had been gluten free for 12 years and as his wife and cook, it was hard!!!!  I knew all too well the difficulties of remaining gluten free.  My biopsies revealed a Marsh Stage IIIB.  I had celiac disease.  Here is the clincher.  After being glutened twice through cross contamination (I wish it was because I threw caution to the wind and consumed some fresh sourdough bread slathered in butter), I developed more issues and I now get all the classic GI symptoms.   How can that be?  Researchers do not know, but it happens.

If you seriously doubt your diagnosis. Talk to your doctor. 

cyclinglady Grand Master
3 minutes ago, Fbmb said:

Ok, now I'm seeing what you're seeing. They didn't check my IGA alone before I had the TTG. So I don't know what that level was by itself. I assume if you're deficient in IGA that your TTG would be lower, yes? Since it says TTG/IGA I assume it's TTG AND IGA. Right? I'm no genius though. And I certainly don't know anything about science or lab work. I'm just a communication major. :) 

Well, an IGA deficiency test should be ordered at the same time as a TTG or before.  If you were negative on the TTG IgA, then your GI could have run it after to insure the test result was accurate.  But a GI did not run the test.  It was at a fair, right?  So, they gave you the one best test for the money.  So lucky you were screened at all!  Most of us took years to get a diagnosis.  My bones will NEVER recover.  NEVER.  

Got  to run....kid needs a pick up!  

Fbmb Rising Star
3 minutes ago, cyclinglady said:

The algorithm starts with the TTG.  If very positive (like yours was), it tells the GI that the next step is an endoscopy/biopsies.  If the biopsies are positive, the diagnosis is celiac disease.  If the TTG is negative, the GI can assume that 1) either celiac disease is NOT likely or 2) order additional tests if he still suspects celiac disease.  

On this forum, many of us push for the complete panel.  Why?  Because the TTG dies not catch all celiacs.  Your case is a perfect text book case of celiac disease.  You were fortunate in the sense that you got a diagnosis and should have no doubt.  Even now, you reported that your TTG has since dropped significantly while on a gluten diet.  That is fantastic!  It also helps solidify without a doubt that you have celiac disease.

Now, the hardest part is recovery.  It takes so long.  Sometimes neurological issues never resolve as the damage is too great, but that is rare.  Again, we are lucky to know the trigger for a flare-up.   Who knows what really sets off lupus or MS?  

Every celiac will have off days -- even weeks.    It happens.  We all have different issues aside from celiac disease.  Those are going to impact our recovery too.  

I was really only anemic when I was diagnosed.  I could not believe the one positive on I had on the celiac panel was accurate.  I did not want to have celiac disease.  Heck, hubby had been gluten free for 12 years and as his wife and cook, it was hard!!!!  I knew all too well the difficulties of remaining gluten free.  My biopsies revealed a Marsh Stage IIIB.  I had celiac disease.  Here is the clincher.  After being glutened twice through cross contamination (I wish it was because I threw caution to the wind and consumed some fresh sourdough bread slathered in butter), I developed more issues and I now get all the classic GI symptoms.   How can that be?  Researchers do not know, but it happens.

If you seriously doubt your diagnosis. Talk to your doctor. 

Oh I don't doubt it. I don't know why else I would have stage 3b damage if I didn't have celiac. Can other things cause villi blunting and hyperplasia? My doctor went to Princeton and got his MD from John's Hopkins, and then completed his residency at Beth Israel of Harvard. He's been a GI in Denver for years and actually diagnosed my aunt in the 90s. When I showed him my results he said, "Yep, you've got Celiac. Sorry about that." and I asked if another AI issue could cause my TTG to be high (mostly because I was relieved it was Celiac and was terrified I could have something else) and he said, "No, not with results that high. Sometimes you'll see elevated TTG levels with T1 diabetes or some other AI issues, but not like this." and then when my biopsy came back he confirmed it was Celiac. I asked him about Crohns once and he looked at me and said, "Crohns and Celiac aren't directly related and no, I don't believe you have Crohns." and he gave me that "Stop asking me about things you read on Google" look. He doesn't tolerate my anxiety well. He's kind but I know I annoy him. I suppose he knows more than I do. 

But I have read so many posts on here where people suggest that some GI's are just totally incompetent when it comes to Celiac. So that gets me second guessing things. But I have accepted I have Celiac. I know my endo didn't lie. And to be honest, I suffered with constipation for years before I was diagnosed. I always thought I needed to drink more water or eat more fiber. But I dealt with that for a long time off and on, and since I stopped eating gluten I haven't been constipated one single time in 8 months. I had panic attacks too and got really dizzy feeling when I'd get anxious. Now I still am anxious and a nervous wreck, but I don't seem to have the physiological responses to that like I used to. I'm content with having celiac. It's a bummer but if you're going to have anything I guess you're lucky to have this. As long as I don't eat gluten I'll be ok. As a control freak by nature it works for me. 


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 catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      9

      how much gluten do I need to eat before blood tests?

    2. - Scott Adams replied to SilkieFairy's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      IBS-D vs Celiac

    3. - Scott Adams replied to Amy Barnett's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      Question

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

    • Total Members
      133,323
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    bttyknight83
    Newest Member
    bttyknight83
    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
      I might suggest you consider buckwheat groats. https://www.amazon.com/Anthonys-Organic-Hulled-Buckwheat-Groats/dp/B0D15QDVW7/ref=sr_1_4_pp?crid=GOFG11A8ZUMU&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.bk-hCrXgLpHqKS8QJnfKJLKbKzm2BS9tIFv3P9HjJ5swL1-02C3V819UZ845_kAwnxTUM8Qa69hKl0DfHAucO827k_rh7ZclIOPtAA9KjvEEYtaeUV06FJQyCoi5dwcfXRt8dx3cJ6ctEn2VIPaaFd0nOye2TkASgSRtdtKgvXEEXknFVYURBjXen1Nc7EtAlJyJbU8EhB89ElCGFPRavEQkTFHv9V2Zh1EMAPRno7UajBpLCQ-1JfC5jKUyzfgsf7jN5L6yfZSgjhnwEbg6KKwWrKeghga8W_CAhEEw9N0.eDBrhYWsjgEFud6ZE03iun0-AEaGfNS1q4ILLjZz7Fs&dib_tag=se&keywords=buckwheat%2Bgroats&qid=1769980587&s=grocery&sprefix=buchwheat%2Bgroats%2Cgrocery%2C249&sr=1-4&th=1 Takes about 10 minutes to cook. Incidentally, I don't like quinoa either. Reminds me and smells to me like wet grass seed. When its not washed before cooking it makes me ill because of saponins in the seed coat. Yes, it can be difficult to get much dietary calcium without dairy. But in many cases, it's not the amount of calcium in the diet that is the problem but the poor uptake of it. And too much calcium supplementation can interfere with the absorption of vitamins and minerals in general because it raises gut pH.
    • Scott Adams
      What you’re describing really does not read like typical IBS-D. The dramatic, rapid normalization of stool frequency and form after removing wheat, along with improved tolerance of legumes and plant foods, is a classic pattern seen in gluten-driven disease rather than functional IBS. IBS usually worsens with fiber and beans, not improves. The fact that you carry HLA-DQ2.2 means celiac disease is absolutely possible, even if it’s less common than DQ2.5, and many people with DQ2.2 present later and are under-diagnosed. Your hesitation to reintroduce gluten is completely understandable — quality of life matters — and many people in your position choose to remain strictly gluten-free and treat it as medically necessary even without formal biopsy confirmation. If and when you’re ready, a physician can help you weigh options like limited gluten challenge, serology history, or documentation as “probable celiac.” What’s clear is that this wasn’t just random IBS — you identified the trigger, and your body has been very consistent in its response.
    • Scott Adams
      Here are some results from a search: Top Liquid Multivitamin Picks for Celiac Needs MaryRuth's Liquid Morning Multivitamin Essentials+ – Excellent daily choice with a broad vitamin/mineral profile, easy to absorb, gluten-free, vegan, and great overall value. MaryRuth's Liquid Morning Multivitamin – Classic, well-reviewed gluten-free liquid multivitamin with essential nutrients in a readily absorbable form. MaryRuth's Morning Multivitamin w/ Hair Growth – Adds beauty-supporting ingredients (biotin, B vitamins), also gluten-free and easy to take. New Chapter Liquid Multivitamin and New Chapter Liquid Multivitamin Orange Mango – Fermented liquid form with extra nutrients and good tolerability if you prefer a whole-food-based formula. Nature's Plus Source Of Life Gold Liquid – Premium option with a broad spectrum of vitamins and plant-based nutrients. Floradix Epresat Adult Liquid Multivitamin – Highly rated gluten-free German-made liquid, good choice if taste and natural ingredients matter. NOW Foods Liquid Multi Tropical Orange – Budget-friendly liquid multivitamin with solid nutrient coverage.
    • catnapt
      oh that's interesting... it's hard to say for sure but it has *seemed* like oats might be causing me some vague issues in the past few months. It's odd that I never really connect specific symptoms to foods, it's more of an all over feeling of unwellness after  eating them.  If it happens a few times after eating the same foods- I cut back or avoid them. for this reason I avoid dairy and eggs.  So far this has worked well for me.  oh, I have some of Bob's Red Mill Mighty Tasty Hot cereal and I love it! it's hard to find but I will be looking for more.  for the next few weeks I'm going to be concentrating on whole fresh fruits and veggies and beans and nuts and seeds. I'll have to find out if grains are truly necessary in our diet. I buy brown rice pasta but only eat that maybe once a month at most. Never liked quinoa. And all the other exotic sounding grains seem to be time consuming to prepare. Something to look at later. I love beans and to me they provide the heft and calories that make me feel full for a lot longer than a big bowl of broccoli or other veggies. I can't even tolerate the plant milks right now.  I have reached out to the endo for guidance regarding calcium intake - she wants me to consume 1000mgs from food daily and I'm not able to get to more than 600mgs right now.  not supposed to use a supplement until after my next round of testing for hyperparathyroidism.   thanks again- you seem to know quite a bit about celiac.  
    • trents
      Welcome to the celiac.com community, @SilkieFairy! You could also have NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity) as opposed to celiac disease. They share many of the same symptoms, especially the GI ones. There is no test for NCGS. Celiac disease must first be ruled out.
×
×
  • 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.