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

Newbie Questions Re Elimination Diet


kathy2005

Recommended Posts

kathy2005 Rookie

Hi,

I am new to this forum and this is my first post. I have been reading the forum for the past several days. I am a 44 year old female.

Last week I had one of my episodes of abdominal pain/bloating/gas and head ache a couple of hours after eating a croissant and two chocolate chip cookies. This episode was a revelation to me that I need to finally try a gluten free elimination diet. I have had these episodes intermittently my entire adult life except for the time I was doing the Atkins diet. At one time in my 20s I had a severe episode and continued to have abdominal pain. I went to the doctor and he said that I probably had an ulcer and put me on Tagamet. I was on Tagamet and antacids for at least a year (it took at least a year for my gut to get better). I have had some problems with iron deficiency anemia that I need to take extra iron for. I have also had problems with intermittent fatigue for as long as I can remember. I have bone loss in my mouth and my bone density in my hips is very low normal (normal in my spine). I have a problem with my calcium magnesium supplements causing morning diarrhea. If I stop or reduce my calcium/magnesium my diarrhea will go away. A few months ago I started natural hormone replacement. I feel much better with the hormones but still have problems with afternoon fatigue. When I am anemic my fatigue starts as soon as I wake up. Atkins helped me tremendously with stabilizing my blood sugar; I have reactive hypoglycemia when I eat too many carbs.

The last couple of months I have not been feeling as well as I think I should be feeling (fatigue and viral like episodes that included abdominal pain). After the episode with the croissant it occurred to me that I have gotten lazy with my diet and started eating pasta, sprouted grain bread, oatmeal, thin crust pizza, crackers and other gluten containing foods. I believe that at the very least I am gluten intolerant. I decided to eliminate all gluten containing foods from my diet.

Early this week I saw my hormone doctor and discussed my theory with him. He suggested that I eliminate all grains and potatoes until I feel better and then gradually add back the foods that I believe that I do not have a problem with.

I have been gluten free for five days. I am not having a problem with gas and diarrhea but I am still having a nagging irritation in my abdomen. Yesterday I had a nagging headache for the entire day. Since my stomach is still feeling ill I am wondering if I should possibly eliminate casein and eggs from my diet as well. It is easy for me to give up bread products because I know they are bad for me. I do not know if milk products and eggs cause me trouble though and I am having a hard time figuring out what I will eat if I cut out whey protein/cheese/eggs. I know I have lactose intolerance with plain white milk but in the past I do not ever recall having a problem with eggs/whey protein/cheese/yogurt. I was eating those foods on my Atkins diet and I do not recall having a problem then.

Does anyone have any advice for me and my elimination diet? Did my doctor give me good advice to cut out all grains and potatoes until I feel better? (I ate potatoes this morning to hopefully prevent the headache I had yesterday.) Do you think it would be beneficial to eliminate eggs and casein now as well? If so how long before I can try them again? (I do not plan to ever eat gluten again.) This all seems so complicated; maybe it would be better to just get tested??? I am just having a hard time deciding to spend the money for the stool tests right now.

Thanks for your help!

Kathy


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Nancym Enthusiast

Well, there's two ways to do this. Eliminate some things and see if you stablize. If you do, great, you've narrowed down the field. If you don't, you gotta throw something else out.

Or, you can start with a bare-bones diet (Meat, fruit and veggies). Let your gut stabilize and slowly start trying new foods.

Nothing to eat? How did mankind survive before argriculture? :D I'm sensitive to casein. I couldn't tell until I gave it up. I lived with low level gas, bloating, cramping and diarrhea and constipation until I gave it up. My last day of casein I had 3 ice cream cones and got the worst gas from that.

Or you could get tested by Enterolab and they can test for quite a few things at once. (Soy, eggs, milk, nuts)

kathy2005 Rookie
Well, there's two ways to do this. Eliminate some things and see if you stablize. If you do, great, you've narrowed down the field. If you don't, you gotta throw something else out.

Or, you can start with a bare-bones diet (Meat, fruit and veggies). Let your gut stabilize and slowly start trying new foods.

Nothing to eat? How did mankind survive before argriculture? :D I'm sensitive to casein. I couldn't tell until I gave it up. I lived with low level gas, bloating, cramping and diarrhea and constipation until I gave it up. My last day of casein I had 3 ice cream cones and got the worst gas from that.

Or you could get tested by Enterolab and they can test for quite a few things at once. (Soy, eggs, milk, nuts)

Nancy,

Thank you for the information. This morning I had chicken and fruit for breakfast and my gut actually feels good. I am going to take you advice and do a bare-bones diet for a wile and then test myself with whey protein and cheese because those are the two foods that I would miss the most. I feel no need to test myself for gluten because I am absolutely sure that it causes a problem for me. If I get any irritation back I think I will have to do the Enterolab test. I went grocery shopping and stocked up on meat, fruit, and veggies so it will be much easier for me now that I actually have the right food in the house.

Yesterday I had two whey protein smoothies and some cheese/cream/butter (in rice). I did not have any overt symptoms like gas/bloating/diarrhea/headache/extreme fatigue but I did have that nagging gut irritation that I have had for a week but it seemed to diminish as the day went on. I am hoping that the irritation was just from the healing process and not from the casein. I am hoping for the best but I am willing to eliminate any food that makes me ill.

Thank you for you help!

Kathy

SAR99 Newbie

I'm waiting on my bloodwork now to see for sure if I'm celiac disease. My 11-year old son is being tested as well. I already know that I need to keep him away from gluten and casein.

How do you begin the "choosing food that you can eat" stage with celiac disease? Did you go to a health food store to get your food or just learn to read labels at the grocery?

Nancym Enthusiast

Personally I'm trying (and soon trying harder) to eliminate things from my diet that are processed and packaged and have long lists of ingredients. I've got a nasty autoimmune disease and I'm reacting to something in my diet still. When you have an ingredient list as long as your arm how can you really trust what is in that thing?

Whey protein... I think the one people are usually reacting to is casein. I've been avoiding Whey protein too because I have no idea how much casein finds its way to the whey.

marciab Enthusiast

I eliminated gluten, eggs, dairy, corn and soy all at once. And anything else that I suspected hurt my stomach (coffee, tea, etc.). My stomach was killing me though. :(

I found it easier to go down to the bare bones diet. Whole fresh fruits and veggies and hormone free meat.

And I still feel better if I eat this way.

I tried reading the labels and found myself spending entirely too much time on each aisle. I was much too tired and hungry to have the patience for that. :blink:

My stomach recouperated in a few months and since I have been adding foods back in. Usually just one at a time, so I know if I can handle it.

Marcia

kathy2005 Rookie

I decided to go ahead and order the Enterolab tests. I ordered the complete Gluten Sensitivity Panel and the Egg/Soy/Yeast panel. I did not see any tests for nuts. I had a good day on Friday but had problems over the weekend. I am finding it hard to eleminate milk products so I decided that the testing was my best option for now. I can't wait to get my results back; I think my diet will be much easier to follow when I know for sure what I should not be eating.

Kathy


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,310
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Scatterbrain
    Newest Member
    Scatterbrain
    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

    • oyea
      I was not diagnosed with celiac disease, but am gluten-intolerant. I have been gluten free for almost 10 years. In April of this year (2025), I got a steroid shot. I have been able to eat sourdough bread before with no problems. After the steroid shot, I developed gluten-neuropathy, and I could no longer eat sourdough bread, and now the neuropathy returns with small amounts of gluten.  I also get POTS (Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome) when I eat gluten. My heart beats so fast in the middle of the night I can't sleep. I'm usually up for hours. 
    • barb simkin
      Anyone bothered  by chocolate and alcohol.  Found I cant drink  alcohol or eat chocolate  Anyone else
    • Jmartes71
      This is my current exhausting battle with the medical field. As Ive mentioned in past I was diagnosed in 1994 by colonoscopy and endoscopy and was told i was celiac and to stay away from wheat and Ill be just fine.NOPE not at all in fact im worse thanks to being disregarded and my new word that was given that fits perfectly medically gaslight for over 30 years.I was not informed by anyone about the condition other than its a food allergy. Long story short if it wasn't for this website.I would be so much worse. I have been glutenfree since 1994 and was diagnosed with many other foods in 2007. I have stayed away from those items, except dairy sometimes I'll cheat when I know I'll be home a few days.My work history is horrible thanks to my digestive issues. I had my past primary for 25 years and everything im going through, he danced around celiac disease. My last day of employment was March 08, 2023 I was a bus driver and took pride in that.I get sick easily and when covid hit me and I stopped taking tramadel to push to give my bloated body a break, I haven't " bounced " back.Though not that well before but worse now.I applied for disability because yet again I was fired solely on health, which by the way seems to be legal because no lawyer wants to help.I was denied and my primary stated let me fluff it up a bit.FLUFF IT UP A BIT?He has been my doctor for 25 years! All that Im going through was basically ignored and not put together. I switched primary doctor and seeing new gi and its EXTREMELY EXHAUSTING because they are staying all my test came back clean, good, its normal. Except THANKYOU LORD JESUS HLA DQ2 is positive that Itty bitty tiny little test of positive FINALLY VALIDATION RIGHT.No, Im still struggling and fighting its not fair
    • Joel K
      Since medical insurance is not affected directly by celiac disease on an ongoing basis (i.e. medication, medical devices, daily monitoring, home care nursing, etc), I rather doubt anyone would be denied a policy for having it as a pre-existing condition. I’ve certainly never been and I have two pre-existing conditions that are managed with diet alone and both are long-well-known by my doctors and via medical testing and procedures. Insurance is all about risk management, not health. 
    • Joel K
×
×
  • Create New...