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 Forum, New To Gluten Sensitivity/casein Sensitivity


AZKat

Recommended Posts

AZKat Newbie

Hello,

I am new to the forum and would like to say Hello! I have been reading the forum for a few weeks, and learned so much already! Now hubby and I are going to go gluten/casein free after getting our Enterolab results on Wednesday. I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed...he wants to start already...I haven't quite adjusted yet.

Anyone have any advice on how quickly to make this change?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



darlindeb25 Collaborator

AzKat--just jump right in and do it. Going a little gluten free doesn't help at all, if you are going to eat any gluten, then you are defeating your purpose. Good luck.

Guest cassidy

It might take a while to get all the gluten out of your life. It is hidden in so many places that if you start now hopefully you will be feeling better in a week or so. Once you get to that feeling better point it really makes all of it worth it and you don't want to go back.

You could start helping your husband and then I would think you would just get into the diet once you don't have any other choices at home. This is a very emotional situation as well. I went through a grieving process and it took a while for me to come to terms with everything. If you need a couple of days, then take them, I can't imagine that would make a difference in the long run and it might make it easier on you now.

I did have a binge day the day before I went gluten-free. We went to a football game where I drank beer and ate pizza. Then we went home and ordered a pizza. I never used to eat like that and I got very sick but it was my farewell to gluten.

I did go gluten-free the day I took my blood test, which was negative. By the time I got the results I was feelilng so much better that I didn't care that the test was negative - I knew there was no way I was eating gluten again.

Good luck!

celiacgirls Apprentice

I'm sure there are many people here who disagree, but consider taking a short period of time to eat the things you will miss.

I planned a week long adjustment period to eat my last regular pizza, bagel, etc., but I noticed after I ate the bagel on day 1 of my binge, that I didn't feel right. I felt bloated. Before my test results, I never noticed any symptoms. I was only tested because of my daughter's results. After I noticed that with the bagel, I haven't intentionally eaten anything with gluten in it so I ended up not doing my binge after all.

CarlaB Enthusiast

Start with the foods that are naturally gluten-free/casein-free -- meat, chicken, fish, eggs, fruit, vegetables, nuts, potatoes, rice. Then build from there. Starting with naturally gluten-free/casein-free will give you stuff you can eat right away while you research what else you want to have.

Download Nini's newbie survival kit ... she has a lot of good information. I'm sure she'll post on this thread, but if she doesn't, look for her under members and click the link in her signature.

tarnalberry Community Regular

There are a couple things I think are important when starting out (and whenever, really)

  • try to stick to whole foods, that are naturally gluten-free
  • make sure you have foods you want to snack on available in your house
  • when you do transition to the diet, remove all the temptations you can from your house
  • accept that you are not just changing a diet, but a habit, and that's *hard*
  • keep on reading this board - lots of friendly and helpful people :)

You'll get to try new foods you hadn't before, and new ways of making things (casein free ranch dip from raw cashews, water, lemon juice, salt, and italian spices, for instance). I find casein harder to eliminate than gluten - I miss it more - but it is what it is.

Welcome!

CarlaB Enthusiast
I find casein harder to eliminate than gluten - I miss it more - but it is what it is.

Welcome!

Me, too!! I have found substitutes for all my "must have" gluten items (except for those stupid fried onions in that green bean casserole for Thanksgiving!! :P ), but replacing dairy is nearly impossible. I'd almost be sick for a few days for a triple organic latte!!!! While I'm at it, cheese sounds good, too!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



AndreaB Contributor

I have found dairy hard to give up, compared to gluten also. It's a mind set and there will probably be times when you are sorely tempted to cheat.

Take a little bit of time to adjust if you need it and continue reading and learning as much as you can.

Welcome to the forum. :)

par18 Apprentice
Hello,

I am new to the forum and would like to say Hello! I have been reading the forum for a few weeks, and learned so much already! Now hubby and I are going to go gluten/casein free after getting our Enterolab results on Wednesday. I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed...he wants to start already...I haven't quite adjusted yet.

Anyone have any advice on how quickly to make this change?

Right now I would say you are already 3 days behind. Listen to your husband and get to it. The more you try to adjust the harder it will be. Personally I started the minute I hung up the phone after being told this was my option. I have never looked back. I will admit there were times in the beginning I did not exactly like what I was doing but I was never tempted to try anything I did not trust being gluten free. In my case the results were perfect. Stick to mostly naturally gluten free foods and listen to your body! Good luck.

Tom

AZKat Newbie
Right now I would say you are already 3 days behind. Listen to your husband and get to it. The more you try to adjust the harder it will be. Personally I started the minute I hung up the phone after being told this was my option. I have never looked back. I will admit there were times in the beginning I did not exactly like what I was doing but I was never tempted to try anything I did not trust being gluten free. In my case the results were perfect. Stick to mostly naturally gluten free foods and listen to your body! Good luck.

Tom

Thank you all for the warm welcome and the great advice. I know we have to do it, and we have already gone through the pantry. It's just that I hadn't expected the results I got....

My husband has always had trouble with wheat, and we basically did the enterolab expecting him to have a celiac gene. I had the test on myself too just to see. I've had chronic fatigue for many years, and some discomfort in the digestions department, but I didn't think I was celiac. It turns out we both have two celiac genes (he has 2 copies of DQ2, I have one DQ2 and one DQ8, plus we both have antibodies to gluten and casein). I was going to go gluten free at home and maybe have something once in a while outside the home...I wasn't expecting my results to be so serious. It's the dairy on top of the rest that is really throwing me for a loop. I just wanted to have a few days to have a few favorites one last time as this is a permanent change...I think I would be less angry and less apt to cheat later if I have that time. I just wondered if you guys thought it better to do that or go his route and dive in immediately.

I forgot to mention that he has malabsorptiuon (I found this board when he turned up low in Vit D as they were trying to figure out his osteoporosis), but I do not have malabsorption yet according to enterolab test.

mouse Enthusiast

I did not have any choice for when I went gluten free. By the time my doctor thought of this disease I was dehydrated, had been sleeping about 20 hours a day for a month and had lost 53 pounds. The doctor said that another 2 weeks he figured I would not have had any recovery (his words). So, I did not have time to say goodbye to any foods. I think that with your husband's malabsorption that the sooner the better. But, that is only my opinion. You both have to decide for yourselves.

About the dairy. I am also allergic to dairy and I use Vance's non dairy milk. They have a website and it is real tasty. I don't drink it, but I use it in my coffee and for mash potatoes. Any recipe that calls for dairy. I also cannot have corn and so I add roasted garlic olive oil to the mash potatoes and my husband likes them better then regular pototoes (he can eat gluten). Vance's also sells a chocolate milk and that is a wonderful drink. These come in powdered form and you make it up.

And before I forget - Welcome to the forum. You will find recipes, advice, etc. here. And we never consider any question dumb.

BTW, I forgot to mention in my PM, that if you need a Rheumy, I go to one in faaaaaaaar West Phoenix and I look at the new stadium from his office. He is familiar with Celiac. Maybe your husband already goes to him - Dr. Tessor?

AZKat Newbie
I did not have any choice for when I went gluten free. By the time my doctor thought of this disease I was dehydrated, had been sleeping about 20 hours a day for a month and had lost 53 pounds. The doctor said that another 2 weeks he figured I would not have had any recovery (his words). So, I did not have time to say goodbye to any foods. I think that with your husband's malabsorption that the sooner the better. But, that is only my opinion. You both have to decide for yourselves.

About the dairy. I am also allergic to dairy and I use Vance's non dairy milk. They have a website and it is real tasty. I don't drink it, but I use it in my coffee and for mash potatoes. Any recipe that calls for dairy. I also cannot have corn and so I add roasted garlic olive oil to the mash potatoes and my husband likes them better then regular pototoes (he can eat gluten). Vance's also sells a chocolate milk and that is a wonderful drink. These come in powdered form and you make it up.

And before I forget - Welcome to the forum. You will find recipes, advice, etc. here. And we never consider any question dumb.

BTW, I forgot to mention in my PM, that if you need a Rheumy, I go to one in faaaaaaaar West Phoenix and I look at the new stadium from his office. He is familiar with Celiac. Maybe your husband already goes to him - Dr. Tessor?

Wow mouse, sounds like it was in the nick of time for you. I am glad that you got the diagnosis in time. It must have been very scary. I can see why you didn't hesitiate. I hope you are feeling alot better now.

At the moment my husband is seeing a doctor at an osteoporosis clinic...the name starts with a V but I can't remember the whole thing. She is the one who finally found he was low in Vit D. She ordered a ttg test but the blood test came out negative and she didn't want to do a celiac panel. She said since the blood test was negative he didn't have it. Luckily, I already suspected that the malabsorption of D was related to celiac and had found this board by then. We ordered the enterolab tests before even getting the blood result.

My husband had gone off of wheat for about 5 years before he broke his ankle and was diagnosed with osteoporosis. Apparently the first endocrinologist did test him for celiac but since he hadn't been eating any wheat or other gluten grains it came back negative (found a copy of his lab work). So for the past 5 1/2 years the doctors couldn't figure out the cause of the osteoporosis. His parathyroid hormone was elevated the entire time, but his blood calcium level was normal. After we moved to this house he wanted to go on a raw food diet, and he began eating whole grain bread....so when this doctor tested his vitamin D it finally showed up below normal. She gave him a massive dose of Vit D to take for six weeks, and said that if he didn't absorb it she would test him for celiac. Turned out he did absorb the vit D and the ttg was neg.

I knew the wheat had made the difference since he'd been eating it again for over a year by this point. So that's how I began researching celiac and found this board, and learned about enterolab. Now we have the results, and we know celiac is the reason.

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - miguel54b posted a topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      0

      Gluten and short-term memory.

    2. - miguel54b commented on dixonpete's blog entry in Pete Dixon
      1

      Hookwormed status report

    3. - Rogol72 replied to numike's topic in Food Intolerance & Leaky Gut
      8

      is my celiac disease gone?

    4. - Wheatwacked replied to numike's topic in Food Intolerance & Leaky Gut
      8

      is my celiac disease gone?

    5. - Wheatwacked replied to numike's topic in Food Intolerance & Leaky Gut
      8

      is my celiac disease gone?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,294
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Jlw34
    Newest Member
    Jlw34
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • miguel54b
      I got beaten so bad playing dominoes that made me realize that I was probably eating something with gluten, the culprit (Simms premium cracked pepper STEAKSTRIP). Now I can look back and see all other symptoms: irregular stools, bad sleep, desire to eat uncontrollably, bad mood, etc. Gluten really does a job on my short-term memory.
    • Rogol72
      I can confirm this. I no longer have any issues with Iodine since being strictly gluten and dairy free.
    • Wheatwacked
      I should point out that iodine is known to exasperate dermatitis herpetiformis blistering. It can take several months or even years of a strict gluten-free diet for the IgA-TG3 deposits to clear from the skin. After the skin completely heals, iodine may no longer trigger symptoms. "The circulating antibodies disappear and skin symptoms resolve as a result of gluten-free diet but the cutaneous anti-TG3 IgA deposits may persist for several years. " Missing Insight Into T and B Cell Responses in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
    • Wheatwacked
      I get my supplements f from Pipingrock.com close to 10 years now. Good quality, prices, ship  worldwide.  My 25(OH)D is at 93 ng/ml after 10 years taking. In 2019 it had still only gotten to 47 ng/ml.  Celiac Disease causes low D from malabsorption. High Potency Vitamin D3, 10,000 IU, 250 Quick Release Softgels 4.8 out of 5 stars, average rating value. Read 1662 Reviews. Sale price$10.70 Regular price$21.39 Basil Carcinoma.  Basil cell carcinoma is the result of failure of the immune system to recognize fauty DNA in cells. It is iodine that causes apoptosis, killing old and defective cells.  Not enough vitamin D to control the immune system and not enough iodine to do the job.  I had a sebaceous cyst, my seventh facial cyst, in 2014.  It started looking like a blackhead, but grew (Third eye blind).  All my 7 previous cysts had drained and healed normally.  When I drained this, there was a hairball the size of a BB and it would not heal.  This was one of many reasons I started Gluten Free.  I chose to not have it surgically removed, because I realized I had nutrient deficiencies that were causing slow healing.  By 2015 I realized it was Iodine deficiency and started eating seaweed, which helped my muscle tone, but not the healing.  The warnings on iodine from the gov't were so scary, I was afraid to use them.  Turns out it is all based on one study on rats in 1948. "The Wolff-Chaikoff Effect:   Crying Wolf?"   Last year I started taking 600 mcg a day and it is reversing my glaucoma and fixing muscle tone, hair nails and skin all returning to healthy,  Brain fog, which had improved dramatically on Gluten Free diet, my thinking got even clearer with the iodine. Finally the cyst my bellwether since 2014, began to heal.  So I had it biopsied  in July 2025, came back basal cell carcinoma.  With the Iodine (Piping Rock Liquid Iodine 12 drops a day 😃 = 600 mcg) is healing normally and I have a follow up in December.  By then it will have healed.  It is scabbing over like a normal wound.  In 1970 the US stopped using Iodine as a dough modifier.  The daily intake of Iodine dropped in the US 50% between 1970 and 1984.  Also, prescriptions for thyroxine have doubled.  150 mcg the RDA is not enough for anything more than preventing goiter.  Growing up in the sixties just 2 slices of bread had 200 micrograms of iodine, add a glass of milk and iodized salt and you're at 300 mcg a day.  The safe upper tolerable limit in the US is 1000 mcg.  In Japan it is 3000 mcg and the average Japanese, traditional diet, averages above 1000 mcg.  Remember when in the 80's our schools were loosing competitions to Japanese schools?  Iodine.  And Japan has 50% less breast cancer.  Nicer hair nails and skin.  It the US our kids are getting dumber, more flabby.  Fertility is dependant on enough iodine, also. 600 mcg.
    • numike
      69yo M I have had skin cancer basal  I use a higher quality Vit D https://www.amazon.com/Biotech-D3-5-5000iu-Capsules-Count/dp/B00NGMJRTE
×
×
  • Create New...