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

Endoscopy Results


Terch

Recommended Posts

Terch Apprentice

That's actually a play on a Seinfeld quote (prognosis negative) but it's true my biopsy results came back negative. He is now going to test me for small bowel Crohns. I read up on Crohns and don't have any of the symptoms except maybe the abdominal pain and diarrhea! I am positive I don't have Crohns but maybe something else will turn up in the meantime.

I must say I was rather dissapointed that my results came back negative, my GI was surprised by my reaction and he said and I quote " you don't want to have celiacs that disease is a real pain" hmmm

So on Wednesday I go for my small bowel follow through test and lots of bloodwork, I will see what that uncovers. I am still gluten free and it will be 5 weeks on Sunday and so far no improvement that I can see.

Oh one more thing, my GI also said that maybe my abdominal pain is from the Nexium!! He wants me to stay on it though.

Now for my enterolab question... Can they test for celiacs disease or do they test for gluten sensitivity? Is the testing that refined or not?

Terch


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



JenKuz Explorer
Now for my enterolab question... Can they test for celiacs disease or do they test for gluten sensitivity? Is the testing that refined or not?

Terch

Others around here will be able to say more about how Enterolab influenced their diagnosis, but what I do know is that they test for both gluten sensitivity and celiacs. Gluten sensitivity is measured by antibodies to gliadin, one of the components of gluten. Autoimmune celiac sprue is measured by testing for antibodies to tissue transglutaminase, which is the "self-protein" that the body is spurred to attack when wheat is ingested. Both can cause similar gastrointestinal symptoms, but the latters will most likely cause worse small bowel villi damage.

The antibody tests done by Enterolab are identical to the blood tests *except* that they test stool instead of blood. Because these are IgA tests, it makes more sense to test stool that blood (IgA is manufactured in the intestines). So the tests are more senstive than the blood tests, with comparable specificity. That makes them better. They also do the genetic testing, which is pretty reliable in general, and if I understand right Enterolab tests for an additional gene, identified by Dr. Fine, that other labs aren't testing for yet. The genes are helpful, because if you don't have any of them, you can rule out celiac a bit more confidently. If you do have them, however, then a gluten-free diet is worth considering, even if the primary problem is something else that is being exacerbated by gluten. I'm pretty sure that's what's going on in my case, though I don't have an official diagnosis of anything yet.

I sympathise with being disappointed that it "isn't" celiac. I was hoping my blood tests would come back positive, too; Celiac may be a pain, but at least it's a definitive answer and within one's own control. That's far better than something like Crohn's, which is unpredictable, and over which you have very little control. Personally, I'm really afraid of being diagnosed with that. I'm hoping against hope that my positive anti-gliadin will be enough to explain my problems, and eventually I'll get better on a gluten-free diet.

AndreaB Contributor

As far as I understand, Enterolab can't tell you you have Celiac. They tell you you have active gluten sensitivity. If you have 2 celiac genes than it would seem that it is definately celiac. Gluten Sensitivity/Intolerance and Celiac are pretty much the same thing. Gluten free for life.

CarlaB Enthusiast

I think the main problem with the conventional testing is that it misses those who are non-celiac gluten intolerant. I have two gluten intolerant genes, an active gluten sensitivity and and autoimmune response, but all my conventional tests came back negative. I went gluten-free again, I had been gluten-free but did a six week challenge for my biopsy, after my biopsy, started healing and gaining the weight I had lost, then after three months got tested by Enterolab. I am very sensitive to gluten and casein (milk). I had classic celiac symptoms, which cleared up by going gluten-free.

Enterolab does not differentiate between gluten sensitivity and celiac, but both require gluten-free for life, and they can tell you if you are having an autoimmune reaction and which genes you have.

JenKuz Explorer
As far as I understand, Enterolab can't tell you you have Celiac. They tell you you have active gluten sensitivity. If you have 2 celiac genes than it would seem that it is definately celiac. Gluten Sensitivity/Intolerance and Celiac are pretty much the same thing. Gluten free for life.

Yeah, I understand why he does that...he's trying to redefine the disease conditions. But it seems a bit like splitting hairs, because he says that celiac itself can only be diagnosed through biopsy, and he advocates foregoing biopsy altogether. So he can't diagnose it, but he will diagnose every symptom and marker for it outside the biopsy, so in lay terms, it seems to me, if you have all those, it really is celiac. If you only have some of them, the matter is more complicated.

What I'm saying, is that even if Dr. Fine can't technically diagnose celiac, because of medical convention, that doesn't change how any individual defines his or her disease for him or herself. Even if Dr. Fine doesn't say it, if you feel comfortable saying it's celiac just for ease of explanation or any other reason, you can. It's hard enough to explain the disease to people who don't know about it, or convincing dr.s you have a problem, without having to meet the letter of archaic medical definitions, to boot...

(Again, not knocking Dr. Fine. He says it the way he has to.)

kbtoyssni Contributor

I would have been disappointed with a negative result, too. It's not the you WANT to have celiac, but you do want to know what's wrong and get back on track to good health again. A negative result doesn't necessarily mean you don't have it. It just means that if you do have it, you're lucky and don't have much intestinal damage yet. Were you gluten-free when you got the biopsy done? If you were your intestines had some time to heal and probably wouldn't show much damage.

Funny that you mention Nexium possibly causing your somach pain. My doctor gave me some a number of years ago to help with my chronic stomach issues and it only make my stomach feel worse. Looking back, I wonder if Nexium has gluten and was really just exaserbating the celiac.

I have not had Enterolab testing, but everyone around here seems to have had really good results with it. It won't tell you if you have celiac - it will only tell you if your gluten sensitive - but the two are practically the same. They have the same treatment.

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

      Patiently Waiting to See Results

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

      Patiently Waiting to See Results

    3. - Jmartes71 replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      3

      Related issues

    4. - Mari replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      3

      Related issues


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,258
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    TracyMc
    Newest Member
    TracyMc
    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

    • 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.  
    • MogwaiStripe
      I can't prove it, but I truly believe I have been glutened by airborne particles. I used to take care of shelter cats once per week at a pet store, and no matter how careful I was, I would get glutened each time even if I wore a mask and gloves and washed up well after I was done. I believe the problem was that because I'm short, I couldn't do the the tasks without getting my head and shoulders inside their cages, and so the particles from their food would be all over my hair and top of my shirt. Then I had to drive home, so even if I didn't get glutened right then, the particles would be in my car just waiting for me to get in the car so they could get blown into my face again. I gave up that volunteer gig and stopped getting glutened so often and at such regular intervals.
×
×
  • 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.