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

How Can You Tell The Difference?


MallysMama

Recommended Posts

gfp Enthusiast

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



cgilsing Enthusiast

I think that (although many of us have common issues) everyone's specific reaction to gluten is different. It's a matter of really knowing your body and knowing the signs that something has gone wrong. It's not neccisarrily D that alerts us, nor does it happen right away for everybody. It was mentioned earlier that some people don't have symptoms and I think that may be the most dangerous situation, because it doesn't mean that damage isn't happening. Over time I have gone from knowing my general symptoms to knowing exactly what is going to happen if I'm glutened. I know that if I'm glutened at dinner, that by about bedtime (although I'm not in pain yet) I'll probably get kicked out of bed and into the guest bedroom because my very loud stomach rumblings and night sweats will be keeping my hubby awake. At about 3a.m. I'll wake up and be wide awake. I'll lay there for hours while the depression sets in. By morning I'll have myself convenced that I'm terrible person, that I have wasted my life, and that I deserve nothing good in my life (hence the depression). Should this happen on a weekend, the only thing that will finally drag me out of my hole at about 10:00a.m. is sever D cramps. I'll spend most of the day doing that, and bloating up, and then for the next week I'll have C and bloating. I'm unable to concentrate or get a good nights sleep (although I'm exhausted) during that time either. Being glutened is the only thing that gives me that kind of reaction. I think when it comes to celiac disease symptoms, it's everything together makes it a clear picture. Plus the severity of the symptoms. We all have off days when we didn't get enough sleep, can't concentrate, or just feel grumpy. I think a gluten reaction is different though. It lasts for days, its always a group of symptoms all at once, and the emotional symptoms are too sever to attribute to just a bad day.

aikiducky Apprentice

"No symptoms"

Mallysmama, what you have been describing in your later posts in this thread don't sound like "no symptoms" to me! They sound exactly like symptoms of a very mild constant glutening. And if you have indeed been eating cereal that has malt flavoring, and not being that concerned about cross contamination etc., then you have been constantly glutening yourself all the time.

How would you find out you ask? Well, start being more careful, and make sure that you really are 100% gluten free, for... let's say two months. I bet you would discover that actually, it's possible to be less tired and "lazy", and have strange foggy spells at work...

About what I said about it not being the gluten... apart from the endorphin receptor thingy, which was a good correction, thank you for that. (Do you have an article/reference somewhere, I'd love to read it if you have?) My point was that since it's the antibodies that attack the intestine, the severity of symptoms, and the severity of damage, too, depends on how eager a persons body is to produce those antibodies, right? A person who doesn't react by producing intestine-eating antibodies to gluten can eat gluten all they want and they might get brain fog, but they won't damage their intestine.

Just for the record - I wasn't advising anyone to go off their gluten free diets! I do think it's important to understand this disease beyond a simple "gluten is poison" slogan...

Pauliina

jerseyangel Proficient

Paulina--I think that your point was very well taken. I also agree with what you wrote in an earlier post about the Celiac possibly waning in the teens and 20's. That is what happened with me. After always having a sensitive stomach with frequent D after eating as a child, I was fine in my teens and 20's. It wasn't until age 29, after major surgery that I began to get sick again.

cgilsing Enthusiast

I definatly think that celiac disease can go through phases during your lifetime. Not neccisarrily just improving during teens and 20s. I was fine as a child. I started showing symptoms in my teens, then improved for 5 years or so, and after a surgery and some lifestyle changes became very sensitive when I was about 23. I have never heard though....does anybody know if celiac disease is degenerative? What do we have to expect over the next 10, 20, 30 years? That may be a stupid question....I've never heard though...

jenvan Collaborator

Oops Pauliina--Just realized I quoted you on accident in my post! I'll get rid of that b/c I wasn't thinking you were telling people to go off the diet, but maybe it seemed that way since I accidentally had your post there? I don't know...either way, I didn't think you wre suggesting that. :)

Ursa Major Collaborator
I definatly think that celiac disease can go through phases during your lifetime. Not neccisarrily just improving during teens and 20s. I was fine as a child. I started showing symptoms in my teens, then improved for 5 years or so, and after a surgery and some lifestyle changes became very sensitive when I was about 23. I have never heard though....does anybody know if celiac disease is degenerative? What do we have to expect over the next 10, 20, 30 years? That may be a stupid question....I've never heard though...

Celiac disease is only degenerative if you don't follow a gluten-free diet, because you do more damage to yourself continuously. If you don't eat gluten, you don't damage your body, and will be healthy.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



covsooze Enthusiast
I'll spend most of the day doing that, and bloating up, and then for the next week I'll have C and bloating. I'm unable to concentrate or get a good nights sleep (although I'm exhausted) during that time either.

That's very interesting. I felt really rubbish on Monday - v sore stomach, violent headache, and had to come home from work. I had had a headache the night before as well. I thought I may have been glutened the evening before (not 100% sure as it must have been by cc and, being fairly new to the diet, am inexperienced in recognising when I'm glutened). but the whole of the week I've had C and been sooo bloated. I thought it must be something else as I didn't realise being glutened could take so long to pass off. Is this other people's experience too?

BTW, thanks mallysmama for being so honest in asking your questions. I'm new to celiac disease myself (or rather have only recently been dx) so it's difficult for me to answer your qus - I hope you get the answers you need :)

key Contributor

Yes, this is my experience. I get D or loose BM's for a day and painful stomach, heartburn and sometimes nausea. I then will have C for a week or more from being gluttened. That is the worst part. If you get gluttened and then you have C for a week or two afterwards. If it was over in 24 hours that would be great.

For me the brain fog consists of hearing my children talk to me, but I am in a daze or spaced out. It is hard for me to answer. I feel distant. Plus I usually end up depressed. I can just wake up and be a completely different person then I was the day before. It is really aweful. I have bone pain, especially in my legs after being gluttened. I also don't sleep well afterwards which i don't understand, but i guess maybe it is because my body is reacting to the gluten. I guess when you have the flu or something you usually don't sleep well. Maybe it is the same thing sort of.

Monica

Canadian Karen Community Regular

I also improved greatly through my teens. As a child, I had severe constipation (impacted several times), would black out frequently and had unexplained anemia.

As a teenager, health greatly improved, absolutely no problems through high school and early working years.

Early 20's, I declined greatly and have been declining steadily ever since! (Maybe it's just getting old, though......) :P:lol:

Hugs.

Karen

Mr J Rookie
....

Mr J - explain more about how you were diagnosed with the vagus nerver problem. I've never even heard of that part of my stomach. How did you know that was happening to you?

hello MallysMama, it was far from obvious what was happening to me - i just couldn't seem to digest. The gastroparesis diagnosis was circumstantial observation by my docs, i tested normal via the barium test - real-time x-ray of barium liquid drink as it leaves stomach - inability to leave in timely manner is the gastroparesis diagnosis - but a lot of gastroparesis sufferers can empty low nutrient liquids normally anyway, but struggle with meals so its not a good test and the better tests were not available to me. i think i remember that the gastro speciaolist who went into my stomach with the endoscope and observed motility (stomach churning) reported it as "not great". I responded positively to the gastroparesis medicine reglan (got my stomach churning nicely, but couldn't tolerate the side effects). Its well understood that the stomach churning/emptying is controlled by the vagus nerve - some gastroparesis sufferers were inflicted by botched stomach surgery which accidentally severed this nerve. However most like me are deemed idiopathic - medical terminology for not got a clue. except its no longer ideopathic to me at least - i cant say for sure that gluten is the sole culprit, but from my experiences its certainly a major player.

in contrast my osteoperosis diagnosis (scanned twice by 2 different machines) and my peripheral neuropathy (shown via delayed muscle reaction to electrical stimulus) are definitive.

i'm just grateful that those last 2 conditions don't stop me from enjoying my favourite hobby. the neuropathy hasn't gone as far as removing the strength in the grip of my fingers and toes, so i can still hang on to my surfboard and keep feet planted on the deck. reactions at elbows, forearms and knees are normal thus allowing me to balance. its at my extremities that things go wrong, so i tend to drop cups and my handwriting is awful (never was great) but i can live with that

cheers,

Mr J

PS my last paragraph descibes my everyday gluten-free condition as opposed to the temporary fallout from a glutening

gfp Enthusiast

[quoxxx

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,856
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Sonya Haskin
    Newest Member
    Sonya Haskin
    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

    • Jillian83
      He is. Which makes everything even more difficult. I’m not a believer in “staying for the kids” but I have nowhere to go and it’s not just me, it’s me plus my babies. We live in a beautiful place, lots of land in the country and me and the kids love the place we’ve called home for their entire lives. But Im seeing that he’ll never change, that my kids deserve a happy healthy Momma, and that staying in this as is will be the early death of me. Then I look at the scars covering my entire body…this disease and the chronic stress I’ve been enduring for years that tell me I’m no longer beautiful and no one will ever look at me with interest again. I try self care, try to give myself grace so I can just start loving myself enough to gain strength but the slightest sparkle in my eye and skip in my step attracts his wrath and it all comes crashing ten fold. Life is just absolutely railing me from every single direction leaving me wanting to wave that white flag bc I don’t feel like there’s much hope no matter what happens. 
    • trents
    • Jillian83
      Hi, I was recently diagnosed with Celiac and dermatitis herpetiformis after years of suffering without answers. I lost my mind. I lost my job. I lost so much time. I lost Me. Conventional doctors are opulent come near me and the one who did sat across the room, misdiagnosed me, pumped me full of steroids which collapsed my entire hip for 6 months. So without answers I began my holistic journey. Fast forward a couple of years and still struggling with a mysterious whole body itchy, crawling “skin hell”, perfect teeth now deteriorating, thick hair now thinning rapidly and no more than a day or 2 at most relief….An acquaintance opened up a functional medicine practice. Cash only, I found a way. Within a month tests clearly showing my off the charts gluten allergy/sensitivity as well as the depletion of vital nutrients due to leaky gut and intestinal damage. dermatitis herpetiformis was more than likely what I was experiencing with my skin. I was happy. I thought this is easy, eat healthy Whole Foods, follow the diet restrictions and I finally get to heal and feel confident and like myself again very soon! 😔 Supplements are very pricey but I got them and began my healing. Which leads to the other major issue: not working, stay at home Mom of young kids, entirely financially dependent on my man of 7 plus years. He’s never been supportive of anything I’ve ever done or been thru. He controls everything. I’m not given much money ever at a time and when he does leave money it’s only enough to possibly get gas. His excuse is that I’ll spend it on other things. So my “allowance” is inconsistent and has conditions. He withholds money from me as punishment for anything he wants. Since being diagnosed, he’s gained a new control tactic to use as punishment. He now is in control of when I get to eat. He asked for proof of my diagnosis and diet bc he said I made it up just to be able to eat expensive organic foods. Then after I sent him my file from my doctor he then said she wasn’t a real doctor. 😡. I go days upon days starving, sometimes breaking down and eating things I shouldn’t bc I’m so sick then I pay horribly while he gets annoyed and angry bc I’m not keeping up with all the duties I’m supposed to be doing. His abuse turns full on when I’m down and it’s in these desperate times when I need his support and care the most that I’m punished with silence, being starved, ignored, belittled. He will create more of a mess just bc I’m unable to get up and clean so that when I am better, I’m so overwhelmed with chores to catch up that the stress causes me to go right back into a flare from hell and the cycle repeats. I’m punished for being sick. I’m belittled for starving and asking for healthy clean water. I’m purposely left out of his life. He won’t even tell me he’s going to the grocery or to get dinner bc he doesn’t want me to ask him for anything. I have no one. I have nothing. Im not better. My supplements ran out and I desperately need Vitamin D3 and a methylated B complex at the very minimal just to function….he stares at me blankly…no, a slight smirk, no words. He’s happiest when im miserable and I am miserable.  this is so long and im condensing as much as I can but this situation is so complicated and disgusting. And it’s currently my life. The “IT” girl, the healthy, beautiful, perfect skin, perfect teeth, thick and curly locks for days, creative and talented IT girl….now I won’t even leave this house bc Im ashamed of what this has dont to my body, my skin. Im disgusted. The stress is keeping me from healing and I think he knows that and that’s why he continues to keep me in that state. He doesn’t want me confident or successful. He doesn’t want me healed and healthy bc then how would he put the blame of all his problems on me? This journey has been hell and I’ve been in Hell before. I’ve been killed by an ex, I’ve been raped, robbed, held hostage, abused beyond nightmares but the cruelty I’ve experienced from him bc of this disease is the coldest I’ve ever experienced. I’ve wanted to give up. Starving and in tears, desperate…I found a local food pantry in our small town so I reached out just saying I had Celiac and was on hard times. This woman is blessing me daily with prepared gluten free meals, donations, educational info, people who know this disease and how they manage life and the blessings just keep coming. But it’s overwhelming and I feel like I don’t deserve it at all. He just glared and I know he’s going to sabotage it somehow. I don’t even know what to do anymore. I’m so broken and just want peace and healing. 
    • 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 .
×
×
  • 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.