Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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

New To The Board And Waiting


tyki

Recommended Posts

tyki Newbie

Well, I convinced my doctor that it was probably a good idea to run the Celiac Panel on me and my blood is on its way to the lab as of Monday, now the waiting begins.

Celiac Disease runs in my family, although until 2 weeks ago I didn't have a name for it. I can remember 30 years ago, hearing that "Grandma can't eat wheat, Grandma is bringing her special rolls with her, wow its hard to figure out something she can eat." Never heard why it was she couldn't eat wheat, just knew that my mother was frustrated with all the things she couldn't use to cook for my grandmother, and remember hearing aunts and uncles say they thought it was all in her head. Now my Grandmother is gone, and I'm in the midst of helping plan my parent's 50th wedding anniversary. Lo and behold, my dad's brother has listed "gluten-free" as a dietary restriction on his RSVP card. Since I'm helping with menu planning for the weekend, I turned to the web to learn what the heck gluten-free means. :blink: Wow.....gluten-free = can't eat wheat, just like Grandma, hmmm....let's look at this a little closer. I asked family members some questions and it seems my uncle was diagnosed because of DH.

You see, for the last 8 months, I've been bouncing between my family doc, a GI, and a OB/GYN to figure out what the heck is causing me to have severe diarrhea. The Gastro doc says "Colonoscopy came out just fine, must be your hormones, you're getting close to the change, or else its IBS, live with it."

The OB/GYN said, "Gastro doc should be fired for not taking a keener interest, yes hormones could influence it, but the Gastro doc should be all over a intestinal upset, shoving it off to the OB/GYN is like the OB/GYN saying let's call in a Neurosurgeon for your C-Section." In the meantime, the diarrhea continues and keeps me home from work a lot more than I'm happy with, but I can't be more than 10 feet from the bathroom.

Then about 3 months ago, the diarrhea seemed to clear up all on its own, gradually. When I put this together, with the recent stumble over family health history, and the Celiac websites....it all started to become clear. You see, about 3 months ago, my husband went on a drastic diet, and our pizza orders ceased, our trips to the fast food places stopped, and basically my consumption of wheat was cut drastically by accident. So then it was time to test the theory. I made a specific effort to have wheat of some sort with every meal for 5 days. Over that time, the diarrhea began to return and by the end of 5 days it was back in full explosive force.

So I took a printed copy of some Celiac web pages with me, and went off to the doctor's office with information and family history in hand. It didn't take long, and my family doc was pouring over the web page information and agreed that I should have the blood test done. He congratulated me, saying it is a very difficult diagnosis to make. Then he went to research what the code was for the Celiac Panel and my blood test was begun on its journey.

This is probably more than any of you wanted to read from a newbie, but I already feel like I'm on pins and needles or riding an emotional roller coaster. I'm just hoping to have the results back before the anniversary event in July. Because that weekend about 90% of my living relatives are all going to be gathered in one place.

Oops guess this should have been a reply, not a new thread. Can an administrator help and move this where it ought to be?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



khyricat Rookie

its ok where it is.....

welcome!

I am still trying to get the docs to give me a positive diagnosis, but make sure you had gluten in your system BEFORE the bloodwork or it will come up negative or uncertain!

Good luck

Guest jhmom

Hi and welcome to the boards :D !!!!

WOW, you do have a long family history and your story sounded a lot like mine. I do hope you get some answers soon, just don't get discouraged if your blood work comes back negative. As you will read all over this message board you will see story after story of people going to multiple docs and going through all sorts of test only to all come back negative and to be told they have IBS. A lot of us here ordered a stool panel test from Open Original Shared Link . This test was designed by Dr. Fine which has Celiac too, it is more sensitive than blood and a more accurate way of testing. Or if you wanted to try the diet for a couple of months and if you saw an improvment (as you did before) I would say that you cannot tolerate gluten and that is a test in itself and "some" doctors will accept that as a diagnosis.

So you hang in there, you will get some answers soon! Take care and Good luck to you!

lovegrov Collaborator

No matter what your official results you already have your answer -- you have celiac disease.

richard

tyki Newbie

I had not gone gluten free prior to the blood test. I had had a significant drop in the amount of gluten I was eating, because of cutting the fast food and pizza out of our routine for my husband's weight loss diet, which meant I was fixing more salads, veggie casseroles, and the like. There had not been a conscious effort to go gluten free, and in fact as I look at the ingredients in the meals I have been eating, wheat has continued to be listed as an ingredient in just about everything. What changed significantly was I stopped having pizza twice a week, hamburger buns, subs from Subway, and to keep sweets out of the house I wasn't making cookies and cakes (to help hubby resist temptation), so the wheat consumption dropped significantly without actually going gluten free.

Over that 3 months the diarrhea I had been experiencing gradually lessened and nearly disappeared, but I was a long ways from being gluten free. To test the theory about the diarrhea being caused by gluten, I started adding toast, doughnuts, sandwiches, or a slice of bread and butter, and some wheat pasta with each meal, thereby purposely raising the gluten content of my diet.

I agree, I think the blood test and the eventual endoscopy are formalities, I'm 99.9% sure I have celiac disease. That doesn't make it any easier to come to grips with this. I have had more emotional meltdowns in the last few days than I can remember for a very long time.

Hubby is being supportive and I love him dearly, but we're both feeling a bit lost about where to start. It's been recommended that I stay on gluten until we finish with the tests and start learning about the gluten-free diet. So hubby tried to help, and while we were at the grocery store, he picked up packages of our kitchen standards (for favorite family recipes) and read the ingredients. It was so depressing, the longer we were in the grocery store, the longer my list of "can't haves" grew and I went into meltdown by the time we left the store.

The next night, hubby decided we should start smaller, so he started going through what we have in the pantry, and my list of "can't have" went up even more. Then he talked about needing to get rid of the toaster, cuz we wouldn't be able to decon it from all the gluten-laden crumbs, and my favorite cutting board, and it piled higher. Then he added that he has decided that since there are just the 2 of us in the house, it makes sense that we will both go gluten free....and I fell apart again.

He tried to help with "it could be worse"....and I know it could be worse, but right now, it seems like the worst news I've faced. Right now I'm having trouble putting a positive spin on it. I've always been "the good cook" in our extended families, my mother-in-law loves that I have learned how to make all the family's traditional specialties (they all contain loads of wheat) instead of being afraid of the kitchen. Now I find myself, at 48, unsure of how to feed myself, and clueless on how to cook with these wheatless flours. It just seems like such a monumental task.

I know its an elephant, and the way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time. But I don't know where to take the first bite. And this emotional roller coaster isn't helping me to think clearly.

Hopefully, I can lean on the pros out there while I re-learn my way around the kitchen.

celiac3270 Collaborator

First off, you're not alone in getting emotional from Celiac....whenever I have cramping/vomiting symptoms I get REALLY emotional....you know, the: "why me?" feelings. During the school year, I was seeing a counselor there. We talked about celiac disease (he has no clue, but tried to help....). However, he is going to be my teacher next year for Advanced French, and it's difficult to talk about anxiety and emotional issues with a teacher....if he were just a counselor it'd be different, but I feel like I'm keeping my tongue in check when I talk to him....and the idea of seeing someone is to open up. Because of my anxiety and emotional issues, my doctor suggested I talk to someone over the summer....he realizes that you can't really talk to someone at school about issues so personal: he feels that school should be kept separate from something like this....anyway, the point of all this: I understand what you mean about being emotional (I am still really emotional whenever I try to tell anybody what I'm feeling....). In addition, I can understand how you'd be overwhelmed beginning the diet....it's just about taking all this one step at a time....after being blood-test diagnosed, I ate gluten for awhile since I had the endoscopy after.....this is a good chance for you to learn everything you can about the diet: seize this opportunity and it'll be so much easier when you officially start, however, stay on gluten until after the scope.

Second, that is terriffic that your husband is so supportive that he'll go on the diet with you. The hardest thing would be to be alone in this...you need people to lean on when you feel emotional or upset.....it's really nice to have someone with you who is helpful.......you're lucky for that.....my mom is that kind of person for me....she helps me find good products, helps me deal with symptoms, emotions, and the like. It makes me so much stronger having someone to support me the way she does.

Third, don't expect to find much in pantries or grocery stores...whatever's fresh (vegetables, fruits, meats), you can have, most sodas you can have, you can have a select few big-name cereals, and most FritoLays chips:

FritoLays Gluten-Free Products:

Last updated August 28, 2003

BAKED DORITOS

tarnalberry Community Regular

tyki, by already being comfortable in the kitchen, you're a step ahead of the game. go to the produce department in your grocery store and look around... there's a lot of food there, and - aside from the package/processed stuff they try to push on you - you can have all of it. go to the meat counter and look around... there's a lot of food there, and - aside from the packaged/processed stuff they try to push on you - you can have all of it. (I'm assuming you go to a grocer that doesn't adulterate the food... that sort of thing really ticks me off, as has since well before I was gluten-free.) and the aisles with the rice and beans - all good, again - aside from the packaged/processed stuff they try to push on you.

see a trend in my paragraph?! ;-) it's the packaged/processed crap (and yeah, I know, I'm a food snob here... I can't help it! it's in my veins! ;-) ) that can get you, but all the rest of the natural foods - the same stuff from which you can make your own (better tasting) version of the packaged stuff.

as for the baking, remember that it took you time - at some point - to get the hang of baking in a wheat filled kitchen; it'll take the time to get the hang of baking in a gluten-free kitchen. while I don't bother with yeast breads very much (time wise, I'm too lazy for them), quick breads and muffins - once you get the idea of the chemistry behind it all - really haven't been a problem for me.

there are going to be things you can't have, can't find a great substitution for, or won't want to deal with the extra hassle of making. but because of that, you have an opportunity to find new things you can't have, that you wouldn't have tried any other way, that no one else knows about.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • 2 weeks later...
tyki Newbie

Well, its been two weeks, almost to the day. I had a voice mail from the docs office yesterday and I called in this morning. The blood test results are back and they were negative. :(

Well, now that was 2 weeks of waiting to be no further along. Of course from reading things on the web, I understand that really all that tells me is that there wasn't serious damage to the intestines at this time.

Now its time to decide if I go ahead with the Enterolab test, or just go undiagnosed and dive into being gluten-free.

I did venture into some gluten-free baking the other night. Made up a batch of cornbread muffins with the Gluten Free Pantry Cornbread Mix. They came out pretty good. :D

flagbabyds Collaborator

I would go gluten-free and if you don't get any better that is when you start to worry.

CarolynM Newbie

Waiting on biopsy results for my daughter -- thinking we will end up trying gluten-free diet regardless because I see such a correlation between diarrhea and increased wheat-pasta, pizza,pancakes in her diet.

Initially, I was told to go gluten-free immediately prior to the biopsy so I did some research and experimenting as you have.

If you are going gluten-free, get the CSA Gluten Free Product Listing. Visit their website www.csaceliacs.org Celiac Sprue Association. The book will help take some of the work out of determining mainstream products that are gluten-free. Also, it gives a flour mix that can be substituted. I used the ratio given of Rice flour, potato starch, corn starch and soy flour for flour in a traditional scratch recipe for corn bread. If we go gluten-free, I will probably mix it up in bulk, then be able to scoop out a cup of baking mix.

Quick and good but expensive - Bob's Red Mill gluten-free Brownie Mix and I found it in my regular grocery.

Good Luck.

burdee Enthusiast

Hi Tyki: Here's an idea to help you decide whether to go gluten-free ASAP or wait while you do Enterolab tests: DO BOTH. :D You don't have to be gluten-free to have Enterolab tests show gluten antibodies, the celiac gene, malabsorption tissue damage. I'm not sure whether you've considered milk sensitivity (many celiacs have lactose intolerance and/or casein sensititivity), but even while using 'lactaid' to consume dairy, E-Lab tests will STILL show casein sensitivity.

I had been gluten-free for 8 weeks and using lactaid supplements for 10 years (and also using digestive enzymes and probiotics for over a year) when I did E-lab tests. They STILL showed gluten and casein antibodies, celiac gene, but no malabsorption. Dr. Fine said "Enzymes can keep malabsorption away, if you lack pancreatic enzymes" when I mentioned taking digestive enzymes before the test (AFTER receiving my results :( ). I kinda' wish I would have known before doing the test, but it really makes no difference. I STILL must avoid gluten and casein.

I assume you started the whole celiac disease testing process, because you had diarrhea symptoms. Then you discovered going gluten-free helped resolve that symptom. I can understand your desire to receive a definitive test result of celiac disease, so you don't have to wonder if something else may have caused your diarrhea. However, whether or not you decide to follow the gluten-free approach to resolve your symptoms or you wait for a doctor/lab to indicate you have celiac disease, the treatment is the same: GO gluten-free ASAP.

My initial celiac symptoms were so excruciatingly painful, I was desperate to do anything to just stop that pain. I realized my own doc had led me astray (for 8 years) with her 'IBS' diagnosis which hurt (with recommendations to eat more wheat bran and whole wheat products) rather than helped me. So I initially didn't care about 'diagnosis'--I just wanted to stop that terrrible pain. When going gluten-free reduced the painful symptoms, I could think more clearly and wanted to at least talk to a doctor. So I saw a naturopath, but he discounted the value of the tests saying the blood test only works (true positive results) when celiac disease is so far gone that gluten antibodies leak from the gut into the blood and the biopsies only work when the biopsy sample actually got a damaged section of the intestines which have to be pretty far gone to have flattened villi EVERYWHERE. He just told me to just keep following the gluten-free diet and then look out for other possible allergens. :o

However, everytime I 'slipped' and got recurrent painful symptoms, I wondered if I might have something else (instead of celiac disease). Those fears made me request Enterolab tests. After taking the complete test panel (with free milk sensitivity test thrown in) and sending off my specimums, my recurring symptoms (despite being 8 weeks gluten-free) made me wonder if I really did have milk sensitivity (even though I had used 'lactaid' a long time). I didn't realize I could also have caseine sensitivity when I started using lactaid. So I tried my own little milk sensitivity test by going dairy free 36 hours and then having 1/4 c of milk. My dramatic reaction (and symtoms which continued for over 4 days) convinced me I was also casein sensitive. When my E-lab results (gluten & casein antibodies, etc.) arrived a few days later, I was relieved, but not surprised. Now my symptoms are almost nonexistent and I'm feeling better every day. :D

So I would recommend you go gluten-free ASAP and send for E-lab tests (if you can afford them) immediately after that. Sorry this was so long, but I was trying to tell how I decided to use E-lab AND go gluten-free ASAP. ;)

BURDEE

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,188
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Leeila
    Newest Member
    Leeila
    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

    • Ginger38
      So I recently had allergy testing for IGE antibodies in response to foods. My test results came back positive to corn, white potatoes, egg whites. Tomatoes, almonds and peanuts to name a few.  I have had obvious reactions to a few of these - particularly tomatoes and corn- both GI issues. I don’t really understand all this allergy versus celiac stuff. If the food allergies are mild do I have to avoid these foods entirely? I don’t know what I will eat if I can’t  have corn based gluten free products 
    • Kris2093u4
      Geography makes a difference.  I'm in the West and Trader Joe's gluten-free bread tastes great and is a better price than most gluten-free breads sold elsewhere in my area.  
    • JForman
      We have four children (7-14 yo), and our 7 year old was diagnosed with NCGS (though all Celiac labs were positive, her scope at 4 years old was negative so docs in the US won't call it celiac). We have started her on a Gluten Free diet after 3 years of major digestive issues and ruling out just about everything under the sun. Our home and kitchen and myself are all gluten-free. But I have not asked my husband/her dad or her other siblings to go completely gluten-free with us. They are at home, but not out of the home. This has led to situations when we are eating out where she has to consistently see others eating things she can't have and she has begun to say "Well, I can't have <fill in the blank>...stupid gluten."  How have you supported your gluten-free kiddos in the mental health space of this journey, especially young ones like her. I know it's hard for me as an adult sometimes to miss out, so I can't imagine being 7 and dealing with it! Any tips or ideas to help with this? 
    • Jane878
      By the time I was 5 I had my first auto0immune disorder, Migraine headaches, with auras to blind me, and vomiting, sensitivity to light and sound. I was 5 years old, and my stepfather would have pizza night, milling his own flour, making thick cheesy gluten pizza, that I would eat and the next day, I would have serious migraines, and my mother & stepfather did nothing about my medical problems. When I was 17 in my first year at college, I was diagnosed with my 2nd known auto-immune disorder, Meniere's disease. I was a elite athlete, a swimmer, and soccer player. And once again my parents didn't think anything of understanding why I had a disorder only older people get. Now after my mother passed from Alzheimer's disease she also suffered with living with gluten. She had a rash for 30 years that nobody could diagnose. She was itchy for 45 years total. My brother had a encapsulated virus explodes in his spleen and when this happened his entire intestines were covered with adhesions, scar tissue and he almost lost his life. He has 5 daughters, and when I finally was diagnosed after being pregnant and my body went into a cytokine storm, I lost my chance to have children, I ended up having Hashimoto's disease, Degenerative Disc disease, and my body started to shut down during my first trimester. I am 6ft tall and got down to 119lbs. My husband and I went to a special immunologist in Terrace, California. They took 17 vials of blood as we flew there for a day and returned home that evening. In 3 weeks, we had the answer, I have Celiac disease. Once this was known, only my father and husband made efforts to change their way of feeding me. At the family cabin, my stepfather & mother were more worried that I would ruin Thanksgiving Dinner. It wasn't until one of my cousins was diagnosed with Celiac disease. They finally looked into getting Gluten Free flour and taking measures to limit "gluten" in meals. He did nothing but ask for me to pay for my own food and wi-fi when I came to the cabin to stay after our house burned down. When he informed my mother, they proceeding to get into a physical fight and she ended up with a black eye. The is just more trauma for me. Sam had no interest in telling the truth about what he wanted. He lied to my mother that he had asked my husband if I could pay for "food" when he asked Geoffrey if I had money to pay for my wi-fi. My mother hates when he spends so much time on the computer so he lied and said I could pay for my own food. I will remind you I weighed 119lbs at this time. (At 6ft) that is a very sick looking person. Neither parent was worried about my weight, they just fought about how cheap my stepfather was. As my mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2014. He had her sign over the will to a trust and added his children. He had no testimonial capacity at the time, so she signed without proper papers. Making this Trust null and void. When I gave my brother my childhood home, my mother stated I would be getting an equal part of inheritance to the house on Race. It currently worth 2.0 million $. I got nothing, and my stepfather has since disowned me b/c of my claim and he knows that my mother would never have left it uneven between my biological brother and myself. She sat me and my husband down, as we lived at the Race Street house and treated and took care of it as our own. My brother took over b/c he was going through a horrific divorce and needed a home so he could get a better custody deal with his soon to be ex-wife who was a Assist DA for Denver. She used the girls against him, and he & I were the primary caregivers. We, Judd and I spent the most time with them pre the divorce. Once Judd moved into the house, he threw all of my mother, grandmother and my family heirlooms out to the Goodwill. Nobody told my mother about this as she was going through cancer treatment and had Alzheimer's disease in her mother and her sister. My stepfather and biological brother took advantage of this matter, as I called a "family council" that my brother just never could make it to at the last moment. All of the furnishing, kitchen ware, everything was in the house my brother just moved into. He had had 2 weddings, I chose to elope b/c my stepfather ruined my brother's first wedding by talking about his relationship with my brother in front of my dad and his entire family, insulting him and having my grandfather leave the ceremony. It was a disaster. My stepfather just plays dumb and blames my father for the slight. I was the only child not to have a wedding. So, my mother and stepfather never had to pay for a thing. My mother had had an agreement with my father he'd pay for college and all medical issues with their kids, myself and Judd. So truly my mother never had to pay for anything big for me in her entire life. I am looking for anyone that has had a similar story, where they grew up in a household that had a baker that regularly milled flour and ate gluten. What happened to you? DId you suffer from different auto-immune diseases b/c of living with a baker using "gluten" Please let me know. I have been looking into legal ways to get my stepfather to give me what my mother had promised, and he erased. Thank you for listening to my story. Jane Donnelly  
    • trents
      Possibly gluten withdrawal. Lot's of info on the internet about it. Somewhat controversial but apparently gluten plugs into the same neuro sensors as opiates do and some people get a similar type withdrawal as they do when quitting opiates. Another issue is that gluten-free facsimile flours are not fortified with vitamins and minerals as is wheat flour (in the U.S. at least) so when the switch is made to gluten-free facsimile foods, especially if a lot of processed gluten-free foods are being used as substitutes, vitamin and mineral deficiencies can result. There is also the possibility that she has picked up a virus or some but that is totally unrelated to going gluten-free.
×
×
  • Create New...