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

Other Food Allergies/intolerances Or Minor Glutening?


Guest cassidy

Recommended Posts

Guest cassidy

I felt great a month or so after going gluten-free. Now, I'm not feeling as good. I keep having reactions, and I'm trying to figure out if I'm getting glutened or if I'm reacting to other foods I may be allergic to. I know dairy is not a problem for me.

Usually when I'm glutened my stomach hurts within 5 minutes and that lasts for about 4-5 hours. During that time I'm running to the bathroom. After that the headache starts which lasts a day. During that second day and up to 5 days later I feel anxious, shaky and jittery.

My recent reactions have been waking up with a bad stomach ache and having D once. My heart also pounds and I feel a little jittery but it goes away soon after going to the bathroom. I'm trying to figure out if I'm getting a little bit of gluten or if I'm eating something else that I'm allergic/intolerant to. I just don't understand how I go to sleep feeling fine and wake up feeling bad. I've checked all my toiletries and my husband's and nothing contains gluten. I don't eat right before bed, so I would think if I ate something bad in the evening I would react to it before going to sleep.

Also, I know when I eat strawberries, pineapple and kiwi my mouth feels burnt and and swollen, this isn't happening with my other problems. I don't know if those are typical allergic feelings or if an allergy could cause the D type of symptoms.

What symptoms do you get from other intolerances/allergies? Does this sound like another type of allergy, or a minor glutening?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

I haven't any clear idea, so I'm just guessing off the top of my head, and I'm probably way off, but could it be fabric softener on your sheets, or feathers in your pillows? Or mold/mildew issues in your house?

Allergies are queer things, and , despite what the know-it-all doctors like to think, allergies don't always show up the way the doctors expect.

I have a friend whose daughter can't handle casein (a milk protein), but she never had stomach issues with it. What she had was constant ear infections, which they definitively traced to casein. Now she's off all dairy products--and hasn't had an ear infection since.

Another idea--might you be extremely stressed--either about the gluten or about something else? I know when I'm stressed, I get stomach symptoms, and it took ages before someone pointed out to me (I never would have figured it out myself) that I was clenching my tummy in.

Good luck--I hope someone else can come up with some better ideas--I'm just groping in the dark!

marciab Enthusiast

My doctor told me that your body does most of its digesting while you are sleeping.

You didn't say whether you were waking up at your normal time.

I have been waking up every morning at my normal time with the urge to have a bm (very loose, like a baby) after being on this diet for a month or two also. It was a good thing for me. I've had trouble with "C" for years.

I cramped really bad for about a week in the beginning, but not anymore, my body has adjusted. Now, I expect a bm in the am. This is the most regular I have been in my life. : )

My food allergy symptoms as far as I know are stomach cramps immediately and sometimes "D". Swollen lip, etc.

So, hopefully this is a good sign for you ??

Good luck Marcia

Guest cassidy

I usuallly wake up to pee between 4:30-6. Once I get up, that is when the stomach pain starts. I don't have to get up for work that early and certainly not on the weekends, so I would say it wakes me up. I don't think this is a normal/good thing because I'm in a lot of stomach pain and my heart is pounding. I feel think there is something bad that needs to get out, and once it does I feel much better. I don't think it is stress either.

Rusla Enthusiast

Allergy symptoms of varying types and degrees can very with everything be it food, fragrances etc. I cannot breath if someone walks in who has used dryer fabric softner. That is why I make my own dishwasher, fabric softner and many other things. I know what is in it and it is not harmful to me or the environment.

mrsnj91 Explorer

Coming from a history and family of FA and EA I would say your reactions are not allergy related. Allergy reactions tend to be more congrestion, hives, eczema, throwing up, sneezing, breathing problems, swelling of the face, etc. HOWEVER, that is not to say it 100% isn't as, like Celiac, people react to things differently. Food reactions tend to be more severe and generally react sooner than the time frame you mentioned. And EA certainly wouldn't cause diarrhea. KWIM?

Oddly...my son has been waking up with the same symptoms you mentioned this last week so I am interested to see if you find out what the cause is.

slpinsd Contributor

cassidy,

your symptoms sound VERY similar to my experiences. Before figuring out that it was gluten intolerant- after I ate, I would get an almost immediate pressure/pounding/spasming in my chest, and felt very jittery, shaky, anxious/panicky. I could not figure out if this was GERD, anxiety (except only happened after I ate) or some sort of immediate allergic reaction. Since going gluten free, after about 1 week, the chest pressure/GERD thing went away 90%. Over the course of the next few weeks, if I accidentally got glutened, I'd know it in a few minutes, because those "anxiety" (which, we both know, is NOT anxiety) symptoms would re-appear, and I would have difficulty breathing, weird heartbeat, and pressure in my chest.

I think you posted over on the Asthma thread I started. Then- come to find out the other day- I have asthma, exacerbated by the gluten/GERD connection. This sounds like what is happening to you. If I get glutened, I have joint pain (knees) and feel anxious, jittery, and depressed, fatigue, for almost a week. But- I had some food sensitivity IgG testing done- and sometimes I think some of those foods (especially dairy, sugar), cause symptoms similar to the glutening reaction. If you do in fact have asthma, I believe that other foods you are not "allergic" to, but "intolerant" to, could be causing the same type of reaction.

Have you had food IgE or IgG allergy testing done? That could help you to pinpoint what the cause is. Also, keeping a food journal has been helpful to me. Also, I just found out that I am allergic to dustmites. Most times, when I get the reaction, I have just laid down in bed. 1/3 of my life is spent in bed. I really think that the dust exacerbates the "asthma", which may already be exacerbated by the "gerd" due to gluten, or something else. Make any sense? In my experience, it is the factors of gluten intolerance and possibly other food intolerances causing the gerd, which, coupled with the dust allergy exacerbates the asthma, which together all causes the anxiety, jittery, shaky feelings.

Also, I was diagnosed with adrenal exhaustion. I have very low cortisol as well as very low DHEA, which is caused by significant bodily stress over time (before I removed the gluten from my diet). This, in itself, causes anxiety/panic/depression, and even though you may remove the source of stress, your adrenals cannot recover- thus your body overreacts to any type of stress. It's something to look into. I'm taking DHEA and pregnenolone. I sincerely pray that you get to the root of the problem.

Kristen


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



mouse Enthusiast

I have food allergies that take the form of severe wheezing, plenty of hives to itch and sometimes (but rarely thank God) my throat starts to close and I have just very short minutes to get an Epi-Pen into my thigh. I have learned that the worse thing you can do, when your throat closes, is to panic. You use up more oxygen that way. If I am going to eat out ANYWHERE, there is always an Epi-Pen in my purse. Since I have been gluten-free, I have only had to use the pen once. But, I use the nebulizer on a daily basis. Yesterday, I served sandwiches that had swiss cheese in them and I also served cottage cheese. It had been 20 years since I had had cottage cheese and so of course I had a small helping. I knew that I would wheeze miserably with the dairy, but I did it anyway. I immediately took a pill for the hives that would start and one for the itching. I used my nebulizer twice as soon as my guests left. Was it worth it - you bet :ph34r: . But, I only have a small amount of dairy once a month. I have not had a glass of milk in 20 years. Because I can get suprises with food allergies, I keep two small canisters of oxygen on hand.

Jen H Contributor

Hi Cassidy,

I had similar symptoms to the ones you describe when I first went on the diet. I was still feeling sick almost every day even though I was eating gluten-free food. I think it was my body's way of trying to mend. I didn't start to feel significantly better until 3-4 months into the diet.

I was tested for food allergies because I was always nauseous. I found out that I am intolerant to soy, and once I took it out of my diet, I felt a lot better. I also kept a food journal and started to notice trends when I ate soy or gluten inadvertantly. Allergy testing may be a direction you could head in. You could also try the elimination diet where you remove food from your diet for some time and then rotate it back in. An allergist or nutritionist could probably give you more info on it.

I hope you're feeling better soon.

Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

They call celiac "the Great Pretender." Those symptoms of nausea, headache, and jitteriness can also be signs of low blood sugar, low blood pressure, high blood pressure, migraines, medication reactions, and probably a bunch of other things.

I wouldn't be surprised if celiac could CAUSE all those problems, too. Do you have a blood pressure monitor? It might be iinteresting to compare your blood pressure (and blood sugar, if that's possible, too--maybe you have a diabetic friend who can test you?) when you feel that way--and when you feel normal.

Claire Collaborator

I am not sure if I am adding to mrsnj91's post or disagreeing. I have been dealing with food intolerance - ie. Type II Delayed Food Reactions for 25 years - diangosed 15 years ago. Type I Food reactions - like the swelling of the tongue or throat etc. are quite different than Delayed Food reactions. The former can be life threatening, the latter can be miserable and in and of themselves create a viscious circle of food reactions - gradually limited the diet more and more.

Symptoms can include almost anything - some may be skin reactions with or without rash (I get bone rattling chills), itching - some localized and sometimes the head to toe variety. Dizziness, nausea and the big D are others. Different foods trigger different reactions. A slice of bread would send me into itching and chills within three to eight hours. Tropical fruits will cause big D in about 6-8 hours. The only thing that symprtoms have in common is the delayed reaction. For some people it is even longer than the times I have posted here. Claire

Ursa Major Collaborator

I just read (by following a link in another thread) that soy intolerance can cause the same symptoms as gluten intolerance (surprisingly, including flattening of the villi!). So, if you're eating soy and are intolerant to it, you can get 'glutening' symptoms, without eating gluten at all. Try eliminating soy from your diet (if you eat any) and see if it helps. Also, dairy can cause similar symptoms as well.

Guest cassidy

Just an update. I cut potatoes and chocolate out of my diet and my stomach pain is gone. Both of those are my favorite comfort foods, so I don't know if I ate them too often and developed a problem, or what is going on. I liked Simply Potatoes mashed potatoes and Baked Lays, both of which have chemicals I'm sure, and everything else I have been eating is more natural and organic, so I don't know if that is it. I made my husband mashed potatoes last night and licked the spoon - I couldn't get them out of my mouth fast enough - they tasted horrible to me.

I'm hoping it is chocolate and not potatoes because potatoes will be much harder to cut out. I'm going to wait a while and try things and see if I can figure out exactly what caused it.

My heart is still pounding every morning when I wake up. I get reflux easily when I eat food that doesn't agree with me. I know that can cause my heart to pound. It has happened twice in the doctors office, my pulse was very high, my blood pressure on the low side of normal. I"m hoping if I get all the things I'm allergic to out of my diet, that it will go away again. I think it started happening all the time when my morning stomach pain got bad. I know it isn't from low blood sugar, because hypoglycemia is something I have dealth with forever, and now know is a symptom I get from glutening. It doesn't feel like that.

mgglutenfree Newbie
Just an update. I cut potatoes and chocolate out of my diet and my stomach pain is gone. Both of those are my favorite comfort foods, so I don't know if I ate them too often and developed a problem, or what is going on. I liked Simply Potatoes mashed potatoes and Baked Lays, both of which have chemicals I'm sure, and everything else I have been eating is more natural and organic, so I don't know if that is it. I made my husband mashed potatoes last night and licked the spoon - I couldn't get them out of my mouth fast enough - they tasted horrible to me.

I'm hoping it is chocolate and not potatoes because potatoes will be much harder to cut out. I'm going to wait a while and try things and see if I can figure out exactly what caused it.

My heart is still pounding every morning when I wake up. I get reflux easily when I eat food that doesn't agree with me. I know that can cause my heart to pound. It has happened twice in the doctors office, my pulse was very high, my blood pressure on the low side of normal. I"m hoping if I get all the things I'm allergic to out of my diet, that it will go away again. I think it started happening all the time when my morning stomach pain got bad. I know it isn't from low blood sugar, because hypoglycemia is something I have dealth with forever, and now know is a symptom I get from glutening. It doesn't feel like that.

Hi Cassidy,

I think I goofed on my first reply. I have similar symptoms even after a year gluten-free, however, I think I am missing some subtle, insididious gluten in some products. When I have Baked Lays I feel ill, or having too much corn products, like tostitos or too much of anything with soy. This usually results in gas pain, nausea during the night, and GERD symptoms, and I will often have to get up and have a bm or tons of gas. It's lovely. I'd suggest you cut out the lays and make sure your chocolate is one of the gluten-free chocolates. My physician also suggested that the good bacteria balance can get out of wack sometimes after a major dietary change so we have discussed my going on "probiotics". I think that is what it is called. Has anyone tried that approach?

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. - Mari replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      Related issues

    2. - Scott Adams replied to catsrlife's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      4

      Patiently Waiting to See Results

    3. - catsrlife replied to catsrlife's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      4

      Patiently Waiting to See Results

    4. - Jmartes71 replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      Related issues


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,260
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    sbr
    Newest Member
    sbr
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Mari
      jmartes, Thank you for sharing  more information with us. Most of us Celiacs whose problems do not clear up with in a few years have to decide what to do next. We can keep seeing DR.s and hope that we will get some  medication or advice that will improve our health. Or we can go looking for other ways to improve our health. Usually Celiac Disease is not a killer disease, it is a disabling disease as  you have found out. You have time to find some ways to help you recover. Stay on your gluten-free diet and be more careful in avoiding cross contamination . KnittyKitty  and others here can give you advice about avoiding some foods that can give you the gluten auto immune reaction and advice about vitamins and supplement that help celiacs. You may need to take higher doses of Vit. B12  and D3.  About 20 years before a Dr. suggested I might have Celiac disease I had health problems that all other Dr said they could not identify or treat. I was very opposed to alternative providers and treatments. So many people were getting help from a local healer I decided to try that out. It was a little helpful but then, because I had a good education in medical laboraties she gave me a book  to read and what did I think. With great skeptism I started reading and before I was half way through it I began using the methods outlined in the book. Using those herbs and supplements I went from hardly able to work to being able to work almost fulltime. I still use that program. But because I had undiagnosed celiac disease by 10 years later some  of my problems returned and I started to loose weight.    So how does a person find a program that will benefit them? Among the programs you can find online there are many that are snake oil scams and some that will be beneficial. by asking around, as I did. Is there an ND in your area? Do they reccomend that person? If you would like to read about the program I use go to www.drclark.net   
    • Scott Adams
      It's unfortunate that they won't work with you on this, but in the end sometimes we have to take charge of our own health--which is exactly what happened to me. I did finally get the tests done, but only after years of going down various rabbit holes and suffering. Just quitting gluten may be the best path for you at this point.
    • catsrlife
      My doctor didn't take the time to listen to anything. I don't even think she knows what it means. She is more concerned about my blood pressure that is caused by her presence than anything else and just wants to push pills at me. The so-called dermatologist wouldn't do a skin test. she prescribed all of these silly antihistamine skin meds. This lady didn't even know what she was talking about and said "they never turn out as celiac, they usually just say it's dermatitis so here's your meds," just like my regular quack. I'm trying to change insurance companies at the moment and that has been a battle because of red tape, wrong turns, and workers having wrong phone numbers. What a joke! The allergy blood days say I have a wheat allergy of .31. Hopefully it's just that and until I find a decent doctor and dermatologist, I'll just lay off the wheat anyway, since it gives me asthma, high blood sugar, and joint pain. So frustrated at this point. The rash on my back of arms/elbows is mostly gone. Both calves and chest have started up. smh. It comes and goes. It fades faster now, though, although my forearms still produce one or two bumps on each side. The itching has calmed down a lot except for the bump area. I have dry skin to begin with so anything affecting it just makes it crazy. i'm never going to eat wheat again. I don't care if they need it to produce results or if it is just an intolerance, allergy, or celiac. It gives me hell.
    • Jmartes71
      I had the test done by one of the specialist through second pcp I had only a few months because he was saying I wasn't.Even though Im positive HLA-DQ2 .My celiac is down played.I am with new pcp, seeing another girl doctor who wants to do another breathe test next month though Im positive sibo this year.I have high blood pressure not sure if its pain from sciatica or sibo, ibs or hidden gluten. Im in disability limbo and I should have never been a bus driver because im still suffering and trying to heal with zero income except for my husband. This isnt fare that my health is dictating my living and having ti beg for being revalidation of my disregarded celiac disease. Its an emotional roller coaster I don't want to be on and the medical made it worse.New pcp new gi, exhausted, tired and really fed up. GI doctor NOT girl..
    • Mari
      Hi Jmartes, It sure is difficult to get useful advice from medical providers. Almost 20 years  ago a Dr suggested that I might have Celiacs and I took a Celiac Panel blood test. No gluten challenge diet. On that test the tTG was in normal range but an alpha antibody was very high. I went online and read about celiac disease and saw how I could investigate this low tTG and still have celiac disease. Normal tTG can happen when a person had been reacting for many years. Another way is that the person has not been eating enough gluten to raise the antibody level. Another reason is that the tTG does not show up on a blood but may show up on a fecal test. Almost all Celiacs inherit at least one of the 2 main Celiac genes. I had genetic tests for the Celiac genes at Enterolab.com. I inherited one main Celiac gene from one parent and the report said that the DQ gene I inherited from my other parent, DQ6, could cause a person to have more problems or symptoms with that combination. One of my grandmother's had fairly typical symptoms of Celiacs but the other grandmother had severe food intolerances. I seem to show some problems inherited from both grandmothers. Human physiology is very complex and researchers are just beginning to understand how different body systems interact.  If you have taken an autosomal DNA test you can download your raw data file and upload it to Prometheuw.com for a small fee and search for Celiac Disease. If you don't find any Cekiac genes or information about Celiac disease  you may not have autoimmune gluten intolerance because more than 99% of Celiacs have one or both of these genes.  PLEASE ASK QUESTIONS IF YOU WANT TO KNOW EHAT i HAVE DONE TO HELP WITH SYMPTOMS.  
×
×
  • 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.