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For The "real" Teens


Kassie

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KoolGuyMkgee Newbie

I'm from Portland, Or. but im up in spokane at Gonzaga right now.


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  • Replies 126
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x1x-Stargirl-x1x Apprentice

i live in california

.::STARGIRL::.

x1x-Stargirl-x1x Apprentice

...

Daughter-of-TheLight Apprentice

Hey!'m from FL. I don't know any celiac teens. Only my mom, little brother, and some old lady my parents have known FOREVER.

  • 2 weeks later...
Guest Joshua

im from tennessee

Daughter-of-TheLight Apprentice
Hey!'m from FL. I don't know any celiac teens. Only my mom, little brother, and some old lady my parents have known FOREVER. Thank God for FL. I live in paradise...
taylor- Rookie

What part of florida do you live in? there are quite a few people from florida. like me :D


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Daughter-of-TheLight Apprentice

Not allowed to say. I don't want stalkers hunting me down. Not that I think any of you are stalkers, but anyone can read this. So... yeah. I live in FL and that's about all I'm allowed to say.

taylor- Rookie
Not allowed to say. I don't want stalkers hunting me down. Not that I think any of you are stalkers, but anyone can read this. So... yeah. I live in FL and that's about all I'm allowed to say.

Oh ok, well im from the tampa bay area, but I live in Tallahassee now for school. But there are people all over florida here.

  • 1 month later...
prettyXmuchXrad Newbie

Anybody else from Northern Indiana or anyplace around there? I feel like I'm the only one!

nzgirl Newbie

Hey I'm from New Zealand

anyone else from around here?!

Stargate-geek Newbie

Eastern Massachusetts, USA.

  • 2 weeks later...
HilaBean Newbie

Phoenix AZ. Any one? i know like one person who goes to my school,and she just found out she's gluten intolerant. I was for some reason, excited. i know thats terrible to say...

  • 2 weeks later...
Daughter-of-TheLight Apprentice

South FL? Anyone? (Yeah, I've already posted here, but WHO'S gonna look way in the middle for my post, I ask?)

  • 2 weeks later...
Kenpo89 Newbie

I live in Utah. I was diagnosed with celiac in feb. 2007

  • 1 month later...
fatcat11188 Newbie

Im from MA- New England's cold

OnlySamwise Newbie

i'm from Hawaii ;)

  • 2 weeks later...
Daughter-of-TheLight Apprentice

Awesome! i wish I lived in hawaii... Though I do like South FL...

nikky Contributor

Cool id love to live in Hawaii or FL ... but wales is ok ... though we get a lot of rain

fatcat11188 Newbie

New England, 1/2 hour away from Boston!

  • 2 weeks later...
OnlySamwise Newbie

That's cool :) . . . UK and FL sounds good to me :D

kiraalyx Newbie

anyone frommm cannnada?

  • 4 weeks later...
Fishy Guy Newbie

Heh, I'm from Michigan, and still searching for more celiacs my age...

  • 1 month later...
Tiger73549 Newbie

I live just South of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

I'm a 21 yo Male.

Ericka Newbie

Im from Minnesota, i know some people here with it too. Im very happy to live here there is so many places to eat and shop here for gluten-free foods its awesome i really do feel..i donno blessed maybe.

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    • knitty kitty
      Blood tests for thiamine are unreliable.  The nutrients from your food get absorbed into the bloodstream and travel around the body.  So, a steak dinner can falsely raise thiamine blood levels in the following days.  Besides, thiamine is utilized inside cells where stores of thiamine are impossible to measure. A better test to ask for is the Erythrocyte Transketolace Activity test.  But even that test has been questioned as to accuracy.  It is expensive and takes time to do.   Because of the discrepancies with thiamine tests and urgency with correcting thiamine deficiency, the World Health Organization recommends giving thiamine for several weeks and looking for health improvement.  Thiamine is water soluble, safe and nontoxic even in high doses.   Many doctors are not given sufficient education in nutrition and deficiency symptoms, and may not be familiar with how often they occur in Celiac disease.  B12 and Vitamin D can be stored for as long as a year in the liver, so not having deficiencies in these two vitamins is not a good indicator of the status of the other seven water soluble B vitamins.  It is possible to have deficiency symptoms BEFORE there's changes in the blood levels.   Ask your doctor about Benfotiamine, a form of thiamine that is better absorbed than Thiamine Mononitrate.  Thiamine Mononitrate is used in many vitamins because it is shelf-stable, a form of thiamine that won't break down sitting around on a store shelf.  This form is difficult for the body to turn into a usable form.  Only thirty percent is absorbed in the intestine, and less is actually used.   Thiamine interacts with all of the other B vitamins, so they should all be supplemented together.  Magnesium is needed to make life sustaining enzymes with thiamine, so a magnesium supplement should be added if magnesium levels are low.   Thiamine is water soluble, safe and nontoxic even in high doses.  There's no harm in trying.
    • lizzie42
      Neither of them were anemic 6 months after the Celiac diagnosis. His other vitamin levels (d, B12) were never low. My daughters levels were normal after the first 6 months. Is the thiamine test just called thiamine? 
    • knitty kitty
      Yes, I do think they need a Thiamine supplement at least. Especially since they eat red meat only occasionally. Most fruits and vegetables are not good sources of Thiamine.  Legumes (beans) do contain thiamine.  Fruits and veggies do have some of the other B vitamins, but thiamine B 1 and  Cobalamine B12 are mostly found in meats.  Meat, especially organ meats like liver, are the best sources of Thiamine, B12, and the six other B vitamins and important minerals like iron.   Thiamine has antibacterial and antiviral properties.  Thiamine is important to our immune systems.  We need more thiamine when we're physically ill or injured, when we're under stress emotionally, and when we exercise, especially outside in hot weather.  We need thiamine and other B vitamins like Niacin B 3 to keep our gastrointestinal tract healthy.  We can't store thiamine for very long.  We can get low in thiamine within three days.  Symptoms can appear suddenly when a high carbohydrate diet is consumed.  (Rice and beans are high in carbohydrates.)  A twenty percent increase in dietary thiamine causes an eighty percent increase in brain function, so symptoms can wax and wane depending on what one eats.  The earliest symptoms like fatigue and anxiety are easily contributed to other things or life events and dismissed.   Correcting nutritional deficiencies needs to be done quickly, especially in children, so their growth isn't stunted.  Nutritional deficiencies can affect intelligence.  Vitamin D deficiency can cause short stature and poor bone formation.   Is your son taking anything for the anemia?  Is the anemia caused by B12 or iron deficiency?  
    • lizzie42
      Thank you! That's helpful. My kids eat very little processed food. Tons of fruit, vegetables, cheese, eggs and occasional red meat. We do a lot of rice and bean bowls, stir fry, etc.  Do you think with all the fruits and vegetables they need a vitamin supplement? I feel like their diet is pretty healthy and balanced with very limited processed food. The only processed food they eat regularly is a bowl of Cheerios here and there.  Could shaking legs be a symptom of just a one-time gluten exposure? I guess there's no way to know for sure if they're getting absolutely zero exposure because they do go to school a couple times a week. We do homeschool but my son does a shared school 2x a week and my daughter does a morning Pre-K 3 x a week.  At home our entire house is strictly gluten free and it is extremely rare for us to eat out. If we eat at someone else's house I usually just bring their food. When we have play dates we bring all the snacks, etc. I try to be really careful since they're still growing. They also, of course, catch kids viruses all the time so I  want to make sure I know whether they're just sick or they've had gluten. It can be pretty confusing when they're pretty young to even be explaining their symptoms! 
    • Scott Adams
      That is interesting, and it's the first time I heard about the umbilical cord beings used for that test. Thanks for sharing!
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