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

Going Off Of Gluten Free Diet


Susan123

Recommended Posts

Susan123 Rookie

Is there anything I should be aware about going off of a gluten free diet? BESIDES the obvious symptoms. For example, Vegetarians get really sick if they eat meat because there body is not used to digesting the meat. Is there a transitional period with digesting wheat again. gluten-free for about a year.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



celiac3270 Collaborator

Well, if you're referring to intentionally going off the diet, two things:

- I have no idea why you'd want to

- You'd have your obvious short-term symptoms, but then, of course, the potential to develop long-term complications: cancer, osteoporosis, etc.

If you mean, what would happen if you accidentally ingested wheat, then:

- Your previous symptoms would come back, possibly just as strongly as before.

- Even with just a tiny amount of gluten, since you've been gluten-free for a while, your intestines would take a long time to heal again since you're not used to wheat. Eventually, you'd return to your pre-gluten-free diet condition

lovegrov Collaborator

I assumed she was doing a challenge.

richard

  • 4 weeks later...
Susan123 Rookie

Sorry I lost my internet connection for awhile.

No actually I don't have Celiac just sensitivity so no damage whatsoever.

I actually have been off of the gluten-free diet for about a month now and no symptoms whatsoever

Keeping fingers crossed.

Why would anybody want to go off of a gluten-free diet? In mind opinion if you don't need to be on it I don't know why anybody in their right mind would be on it. It is the worst diet out there. :-) :D

Bottom line is I have a Wheat allergy and gluten sensitivity but tolerate certain levels. So far so good. Never really had symptoms before.

tarnalberry Community Regular

From everything I have ever read, having gluten sensitivity but no damage only means that you haven't been producing antibodies long enough to have produced significant damage in the intestines, so I would at the least encourage you to have repeat biopsies over the years to confirm that you do not develop damage. (Don't rely on symptoms - we all know there are too many silent celiacs out there to assume we're clear if we've got no symptoms.)

BTW, if you think a gluten-free diet is hard, try a very low oxalate diet! Now there's a restrictive diet! :-P

lovegrov Collaborator

I'm not saying the gluten-free diet is great, but hidden corn and soy is actually much harder than hidden wheat. And much more pervasive. Or you could be diabetic, or...

But I certainly agree I wouldn't be on it I didn't have to. You should continue to be tested over the years.

richard

burdee Enthusiast

Susan123: Just curious, but how did you discover you were gluten 'sensitive' in the first place? Why would your doctor test you for celiac, if you didn't complain of 'symptoms'? Were you being tested for allergies to other foods? Did you suspect celiac, but tests came back negative? You said you have a 'wheat allergy and gluten sensitivity' but can 'tolerate certain levels'. Were those your words or your doctor's diagnosis? How do you know how much you can 'tolerate' if you don't have symptoms to tell you that you have gone beyond a certain tolerable level? :unsure:

Perhaps my excruciatingly painful celiac symptoms are a blessing in disguise. Pain was a great motivator to make me avoid all gluten (as well as dairy) even before I received my Enterolab diagnosis (gluten/casein antibodies, celiac gene). Until the pains became so severe, I didn't suspect I was celiac because I didn't have the 'classic diarrhea & weight loss'. When I finally learned about other celiac symptoms, I could trace those back (about 50 years) to my early childhood and throughout my adult life. After getting the "IBS" misdiagnosis 10 years ago, I kinda' accepted that my symptoms were just normal for me, 'though I tried all kinds of high fiber diets for regularity (since constipation as well as cramping pain was one of my symptoms). OK, I'm rambling again ... :o To make a long story short: If your celiac blood/biopsy tests came back negative or your doctor told you 'no celiac' but 'gluten sensitivity' (I'm just guessing here, because I don't have the whole story :huh: ), just keep eating all the gluten you want. Eventually you may develop more obvious symptoms that make you want to reconsider how much gluten you can tolerate. ;)

BURDEE


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Guest jhmom

Susan:

No actually I don't have Celiac just sensitivity so no damage whatsoever

I was tested through Enterolab and my test results were positive for "gluten sensitivity", I also tested positive for "malabsorption due to small intestinal damage". It takes time for damage to show up in an endoscopy biopsy if that is how you were tested and know there is no damage. I had an endoscopy 2 months before my Enterolab testing and it showed "patchy inflammation".

I strongly urge you NOT to go off the diet just because you have gluten sensitivity. Both Celiac and gluten sensitivity are treated the same way whether you have damage or not and that is by a strict adherence to a gluten-free diet for life. As you probably have read some people with Celiac never show GI symptoms but that does not mean that damage is not being done to your body.

flagbabyds Collaborator

You should defenitley stay in the diet, even if you don't have damage that means they probably caught celiac disease at an early stage. Even if you don't have symptoms it is still doing damage to your intestines and there are some celiacs who were just tested because someone else in their family had it or they were short. My sister is A symptomatic and doesn't get symptoms until they just suddnley build up and hit her and she gets really sick.

Susan123 Rookie

This is going to be short because I typed a long message and then accidentially deleted it. Urghhh..

Thanks for the responses but no need to worry. This is under the advice of the co-director of University of Maryland's Celiac Research Center.

Just to answer some questions first: I started out sick after returning home from vacation. All of a sudden at 30 years of age with no prior issues. My cousin and my uncle also were sick and it was believed that it was the water (ghiardia). I took antibiotics and it went away but took a couple of months to feel normal again. During this time I got tested for Celiac. Tissue Transglutimase is negative, IgG negative and IgA high. Hence, I went to get a endoscopy and a colonoscopy with an gastroenterologist. Both results- totally normal. The celiac center reviewed the slides for signs of "Pre-Celiac damage" and found none. Result- diagnosis I don't have Celiac just gluten sensitivity and when I eat gluten it will not damage my insides now or in the future. According to the celiac center, elevated IgA does not specify auto-immune response or sensitivity/allergy. So with an isolated high IgA you can not make the assumption that you have celiac. You could have an infection such as mono or strep throat and it can cause an elevated level. The reason they are saying I am sensitive is because I have a wheat allergy confirmed by tests. Thanks for worrying and don't fear I have to see my gastroenterologist every five years for something else so he will check it then. Thanks for the info.

flagbabyds Collaborator

I don't really agree with them... (not saying they are wrong just my opinion) If you feel better on the diet then stay on it and that's that. You don't need a doctors diagnosis to how you feel.

Guest jhmom
Result- diagnosis I don't have Celiac just gluten sensitivity and when I eat gluten it will not damage my insides now or in the future.

I am not sure I agree with this statement from your doctor. As I stated above I was dx with gluten sensitivity and did have "patchy inflammation" on my biopsy (not enough for Gastro to dx) and stool test that showed "malabsorption due to small intestinal damage".

I am glad you are feeling well and in charge of your health, I just wanted to tell you of my experience.

Susan123 Rookie

Thanks again for the concern but if you can't believe one of the two top doctors in the country for Celiac who can you believe. The tests that are out there are the result of their research. They are the pioneers for this disease. Like I said I am going to continue to check it out every 5 years but for now the gluten-free diet doesn't make me feel any better because I feel great on a normal diet. If anything the gluten-free diet makes me feel worse because I can't eat the foods I love.

Guest jhmom

It's good you plan on keeping an eye on things and getting checked every 5 years. I hope you continue to feel great while eating normal foods. Good luck to you and God Bless!

burdee Enthusiast

Hi Susan: Thanks for explaining your situation. :) Perhaps you should ask your doctor your original question "Is there anything I should be aware about going off a gluten free diet. Besides obvious symptoms." Most of us here have had such horrible experiences with ingesting gluten (pain, intestinal damage, debilitating symptoms, other autoimmune diseases), that the thought of purposely eating gluten containing foods is unthinkable. :o I can only speak of the awful recurrence of painful symptoms when I accidentally went 'off the gluten-free diet'. Maybe your doctor could tell you about experiences of other patients who returned to eating gluten after abstaining for a year.

BURDEE

plantime Contributor
The reason they are saying I am sensitive is because I have a wheat allergy confirmed by tests.

You have been diagnosed with a wheat allergy, so please do yourself a favor, and do not eat wheat! If I were you, I would still avoid gluten. I know the diet is a pain, but it is doable, and once you get used to it, it is easy. Because of your allergy, you will have to read labels for the rest of your life anyway, and you will have to avoid the main gluten-containing food for optimum health. Therefore, I believe it would just be common sense to be gluten free. Just my opinion!

Susan123 Rookie

Not all food allergies produce symptoms. I do not have any symptoms when I eat wheat respiratory or gastrically. I just react strongly when high concentrated amounts are put under my skin. Being that I don't eat a loaf of bread at a time I feel fine when I eat wheat. I also have a corn allergy but am able to eat it w/o symptoms. Believe me I would not eat something if I knew it would cause me problems. I am very careful with what I eat and have been most of my life in general. I look at it as I only have one body and if I don't take care of it no one will. Thanks for all the posts.

plantime Contributor

All allergies produce symptoms. You are just not recognizing the symptoms in your body. A headache, muscle cramps, fatigue, joint pain, irritability, these are all symptoms of allergy. Respiratory and gastrically are just the most obvious ones. You have tested positive for wheat allergy. Eating it is a very big mistake. It is your health, ruin it if you want to.

Just so you know, I have allergies, too. I am speaking from experience. The symptoms I listed above are the ones that I got rid of when I quit eating wheat.

dana-g Newbie

Susan, I would think your allergist could tell you if you are doing anything harmful to yourself by eating wheat if you are allergic to it even though it doesn't produce any symptoms (lucky you!) Otherwise, have a Twinkie on me! Nice to hear somebody has gotten a reprieve!

Dana, Gloriously gluten-free

Susan123 Rookie

Thank you. Mmmhh twinkie I haven't had that one yet. I guess I am confused (in response to plantime) My allergist said that responding positively to a food doesn't mean you will have symptoms. He said you can but you don't have to have any symptoms. He also said it wouldn't damage my body if I didn't produce symptoms. If you know different please let me know. How can headaches, irritability, fatique damage my body? I am asking because I am curious and because there is so much different information out there. I get headaches but mine continued during my whole year gluten-free. Mine are attributed to clenching my teeth when I sleep. I have a guard I use to eliminate the headaches. I am not irritable (that I know of :-) ), I get tired here and there but not any more than normal. Usually after a stressful day or a long night. After trying to think of anything that might be "abnormal" I can't think of anything. I get my bloodwork done every three months and everything is "great" as my doctor says. I do have joint pain in my knee but it has been confirmed it is the result of an injury. What other kind of symptoms would an allergy produce?

plantime Contributor

Whatever. You tested positive for the allergy, so your body does react. You just do not see what the reaction is. I am not going to tell you that you can eat wheat. My mom had the same attitude you are showing, and now she is dead. Her "non-reaction" caused her colon to rupture. Just because you are not seeing a reaction, does not mean it is not happening. I will not tell you that it is ok for you to eat wheat.

Susan123 Rookie

I am sorry about your mom. I am not asking to see if it is ok I am just trying to understand what you are saying. You obviously have experience in this area and I am asking to better educate myself as well. I am sorry if I offend you with the questions. I am just trying to understand this and the only way I know how is to ask away.

dianne Rookie

Susan, i can't really contribute anything to the medical aspects of this discussion. However, I just wanted to say, that I believe everyone here just has your welfare in mind. I hope you take the advice with that in mind. Good luck with the future! :D

I'm curious, does your Celiac Center have a website?

Dianne

plantime Contributor
How can headaches, irritability, fatique damage my body?

What causes them is what damages your body. They also do damage to your psyche. After so long of being tired, or having a headache, or being irritable, you start to feel bad all over. You get depressed and angry. It is debilitating. Your allergist is probably doing what mine did: discount anything that is not an anaphylactic reaction. He says headaches and such are not caused by allergies, but my diet tests done by other doctors have proven otherwise. Eggs give me horrible migraines. They cause the lining of my brain to swell, which applies pressure to the brain, and causes some of the cells to rupture. The ruptured cells never heal, and after so many years of this damage, brain damage occurs. I could just suffer the headaches, and eat the eggs anyway, but unmeasurable damage now will add up to severe damage over time. I just do not like to see it happen to others, including you. I just want the best of health for all of us.

Susan123 Rookie

Thank you. I never thought of it that way. I have a follow up appt with my allergist soon and I am going to bring this up to him and see what he says. The eating wheat right now is more for the Celiac Center to see what my antibody level is on and off of gluten. So I have another 2 mos. of it and then I go and see them again after getting my antibody level checked. So I have to a least wait until then to make any changes to my diet or it will screw up my test results.

Open Original Shared Link is the University of MD Center for Celiac Research's website

Thanks all for the concern and I am taking it all into account seriously.

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. - xxnonamexx replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      50

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

    2. - catnapt replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      8

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    3. - knitty kitty replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      8

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    4. - knitty kitty replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      50

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

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

    • Total Members
      133,368
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Klairep
    Newest Member
    Klairep
    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

    • xxnonamexx
      I don't know if I am getting sufficient Omega Threes. I read about  phosphotidyl choline may cause heart issues. I will have o do further research on heathy Omega 3 supplements or from foods. Is there a blood test that can tell you everything level in your system such as Thiamine, Benfotiamine levels etc? Thanks
    • catnapt
      If lectins were my problem, I would react to wheat germ (the highest source of wheat lectins) and beans. I don't. I only react to bread and pasta, which are the highest sources of gluten. Therefore, my issue is wheat-specific (Gluten/ATIs), not a general lectin issue.   I have eaten a supposedly high lectin diet (I say supposedly because lectin content in these foods is greatly reduced by proper cooking and I eat very few of those foods raw, and even then, rarely!!) for years. My health has improved greatly on my whole foods plant forward diet. I have asked all my drs and a registered dietician about my diet, asked if eating such a high amnt of fiber might interfere with the digestion of any other nutrients and the answer has always been NO.     while doing the gluten challenge I did not eat ANY wheat germ (since it doesn't have hardly any gluten, and I was too sick from the bread and pasta to want to eat much anyway) I will NOT put that poison in my body again. That was a horrific experience and if this is what most celiac patients have to deal with, I am very sorry for them I don't care if I have celiac or NCGS I won't intentionally cause myself that much pain and suffering it's not worth it.  
    • knitty kitty
      @catnapt,  Wheat germ contains high amounts of lectins which are really hard to digest and can be irritating to the digestive tract.  They can stimulate IgG antibody production as your blood test shows.   Even beans have lectins.  You've simply eaten too many lectins and irritated your digestive tract.   You may want to allow your digestive tract to rest for a week, then start on gluten in "normal" food, not in concentrated vital wheat gluten. This explains it well: Lectins, agglutinins, and their roles in autoimmune reactivities https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25599185/
    • knitty kitty
      I take Now B-1 (100 mg) Thiamine Hydrochloride, and Amazing Formulas L-Tryptophan (1000 mg).   Both are gluten free and free of other allergens.  I've taken them for a long time and haven't had a problem with them. I take Vitamin A from BioTech called "A-25".  It's gluten and allergen free and made in the USA.  It's a powder form of Vitamin A.  I was having trouble digesting fats at one point, but found I tolerated the powder form much better and have stuck with it since.   Tryptophan and Vitamin A help heal the intestines as well as improves skin health.  I get Dermatitis Herpetiformis and eczema flairs when my stomach is upset.  So I'm healing the outside as well as the inside.   I take one 1000 mg Tryptophan before bedtime.   With the Thiamine HCl, take 100 mg to start.  If you don't notice anything, three hours later take another. You can keep increasing your dose in this manner until you do notice improvement.  Remember not to take it in the evening so it won't keep you too energized to sleep. When I first started Thiamine HCl, taking 500 mg to 1000 mg to start was recommended.  If you've been thiamine insufficient for a while, you do notice a big difference.  It's like the start of a NASCAR race: Zoom, Zoom, turn it up!   This scared or made some people uncomfortable, but it's just your body beginning to function properly, like putting new spark plugs in your engine.  I took 1000 mg all at once without food.  It kicked in beautifully, but I got a tummy ache, so take with food.  I added in Thiamine TTFD and Benfotiamine weeks later and felt like I was Formula One racing.  So cool.  You may feel worse for a couple days as your body adjusts to having sufficient thiamine.  Feels sort of like you haven't cranked your engine for a while and it backfires and sputters, but it will settle down and start purring soon enough.  Adjust your dose to what feels right for you, increasing your dose as long as you feel improvement.  You can reach a plateau, so stay there for several days, then try bumping it up again.  If no more improvements happen, you can stay at the plateau amount and experiment with increasing your Thiamine TTFD.  It's like being your own lab rat.  LoL Yes, take one Benfotiamine at breakfast and one at lunch.  Take the B Complex at breakfast. Take the TTFD at breakfast and lunch as well.  I like to take the vitamins at the beginning of meals and the NeuroMag at the end of meals.   You may want to add in some zinc.  I take Thorne Zinc 30 mg at breakfast at the beginning of the meal.   Are you getting sufficient Omega Threes?  Our brains are made up mostly of fat.  Flaxseed oil supplements, sunflower seed oil supplements (or eat the seeds themselves) can improve that.  Cooking with extra virgin olive oil, avocado oil, or coconut oil is also helpful.   @Wheatwacked likes phosphotidyl choline supplements for his Omega Threes.  He's also had dramatic health improvement by supplementing thiamine.  You're doing great!  Thank you for sharing your journey with us.  This path will smooth out.  Keep going!  
    • catnapt
      good luck! vital wheat gluten made me violently ill. I will touch the stuff ever again.  
×
×
  • 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.