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

Symptoms


newg

Recommended Posts

newg Apprentice

I had a negative blood test but my endoscopy was positive (my small intestine was has damage) so my doctor told me I have Celiac Disease. The ONLY symptom I have is feeling nauseous and since I have stopped eating gluten and wheat I have been feeling better but I still feel nauseous about half the time. Is this normal....how long does it usually take to feel better? Has anyone else had this symptom? Thanks :)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Lisa Mentor

Welcome:

You damage to you intestines too quite some time, healing will likwise.

Make sure that you are eating lightly seasoned food and check your lotions, shampoo, (lipstick?) and toothpaste.

happygirl Collaborator

Newg,

Welcome to the board! We are happy you have found us, amidst your diagnosis.

Yes, it is normal. How long have you been on the gluten free diet? It takes awhile to heal. For some, they see improvements but it takes months to get back to normal. Others heal and get better pretty quickly. Others see no improvements and then months later, get better.

Celiac is often referred to as a medical chameleon because there are so many symptoms, so many variances on healing times, etc. One person can have diarrhea, another constipation. One can have weight loss, another weight gain. Some have absolutely every symptom in the book, others only have the "classic" GI symptoms, others have relatively no symptoms (referred to as "asymptomatic Celiac" or "silent Celiac.")

So...the standard answer is....as much as anything is normal with this disease, yes it is normal. :P

Plus, the learning curve is steep with gluten free eating, so you might still be getting gluten through ingredients or cross contamination.

Let us know what we can do to help. Please feel free to PM me anytime!

Laura

NoGluGirl Contributor
I had a negative blood test but my endoscopy was positive (my small intestine was has damage) so my doctor told me I have Celiac Disease. The ONLY symptom I have is feeling nauseous and since I have stopped eating gluten and wheat I have been feeling better but I still feel nauseous about half the time. Is this normal....how long does it usually take to feel better? Has anyone else had this symptom? Thanks :)

Dear newg,

I am gluten intolerant and nausea has been my primary symptom. It is so hard to deal with. Since you have damage, chances are, the nausea you are still experiencing is due to your small intestine not being healed yet. It can take months or even years for it to completely heal if the damage is really bad.

On top of the nausea, I had such bad reflux I had to sleep practically sitting straight up. I also had poking pains all over my stomach, and the runs. My stomach also got so bloated and hurt, and I could not lose weight no matter what I did! About once a week, usually after I ate waffles, a peice of bread, or a poptart, or noodles, I would get so bloated and queasy, and would break out in a sweat, get extremely nauseated, start shaking and have diarrhea. Sometimes I got the dry heaves as well, on top of having so much gas I felt like I was having a heart-attack. I would shake really bad and my hands would go numb. Promethazine is the only thing that helped. Since going gluten-free, the reflux has reduced quite a bit, and I was taking Prilosec twice a day and it was unbearable even with it before the diet. Now I can even skip a dose and if I am late with it, it does not nearly kill me. This is a miracle in itself! The nausea has reduced to the point I can actually leave the house without taking my medication first! I have had more trouble with it returning since I did a course of antibiotics, but I have yeast candida as well. My tongue was going numb and my lips were swelling up too, before going gluten-free. It took only a few days before I saw results. I have to say it took a couple of weeks before I really noticed a difference. It was worth the wait. I hope to improve further soon. I hope this helped.

Sincerely,

NoGluGirl

P.S. I had a negative biopsy and bloodwork, but obviously it was not very accurate.

Ursa Major Collaborator
I had a negative blood test but my endoscopy was positive (my small intestine was has damage) so my doctor told me I have Celiac Disease. The ONLY symptom I have is feeling nauseous and since I have stopped eating gluten and wheat I have been feeling better but I still feel nauseous about half the time. Is this normal....how long does it usually take to feel better? Has anyone else had this symptom? Thanks :)

Have you eliminated dairy as well? People with celiac disease can generally not tolerate dairy until the villi heal, and many can't tolerate casein (meaning all dairy, because casein is the protein in milk) and won't ever be able to have milk.

So, eliminating gluten might be eliminating half the problem, and you might start feeling even much better if you get rid of dairy.

Another culprit could be soy. Dairy and soy are also known to cause villi damage and could be a problem on top of the gluten, or even instead of it.

So, eliminate those and see how you are doing. Then, after about a month, test them one at a time, to see if you react. If you do, you know to keep them out of your diet.

It can be tricky. You also may still have gluten somewhere sneaking in. Have you gone through all of your personal care products? You need to replace everything with gluten (wheat germ oil, barley extract, oat bran), and that goes for shampoo, conditioner, lipstick/chapstick, soap, toothpaste, lotions etc.

Also, if you're eating gluten-free bread, have you bought yourself a new toaster? It simply isn't possible to clean your toaster well enough to be safe. The same goes for plastic colanders, wooden cutting boards and wooden cooking spoons, and scratched non-stick cookware.

newg Apprentice
Dear newg,

I am gluten intolerant and nausea has been my primary symptom. It is so hard to deal with. Since you have damage, chances are, the nausea you are still experiencing is due to your small intestine not being healed yet. It can take months or even years for it to completely heal if the damage is really bad.

On top of the nausea, I had such bad reflux I had to sleep practically sitting straight up. I also had poking pains all over my stomach, and the runs. My stomach also got so bloated and hurt, and I could not lose weight no matter what I did! About once a week, usually after I ate waffles, a peice of bread, or a poptart, or noodles, I would get so bloated and queasy, and would break out in a sweat, get extremely nauseated, start shaking and have diarrhea. Sometimes I got the dry heaves as well, on top of having so much gas I felt like I was having a heart-attack. I would shake really bad and my hands would go numb. Promethazine is the only thing that helped. Since going gluten-free, the reflux has reduced quite a bit, and I was taking Prilosec twice a day and it was unbearable even with it before the diet. Now I can even skip a dose and if I am late with it, it does not nearly kill me. This is a miracle in itself! The nausea has reduced to the point I can actually leave the house without taking my medication first! I have had more trouble with it returning since I did a course of antibiotics, but I have yeast candida as well. My tongue was going numb and my lips were swelling up too, before going gluten-free. It took only a few days before I saw results. I have to say it took a couple of weeks before I really noticed a difference. It was worth the wait. I hope to improve further soon. I hope this helped.

Sincerely,

NoGluGirl

P.S. I had a negative biopsy and bloodwork, but obviously it was not very accurate.

I take promethazine too! I try not to take it unless I have to because it makes me so tired!!! I am gluten-free (i think) and now I only get nauseaus about every other day. I'm hoping in a couple of weeks I won't have to take it anymore. Do you still take it? Thanks for the response...its nice to know someone else has the same symptoms as me!

newg

Mary Contrary Rookie

I had nausea for a bit as well, it really scared me at first when I was getting sick to my stomach usually in the middle of the night, I'd even have to get up and throw up...that coupled with the explosive D I thought I was in the throws of something horrible and life threatening...

I have had negative blood work and now going for a biopsy this coming week, but I have been off of gluten for 2 months now, I figured it out myself, my regular Doc was no help at all..and my symptoms are starting to subside...especially the horrible bloating and gas, it was gone in a matter of a week or so..the D is just now starting to go away. It doesn't even matter to me what they find or don't find next week, I am sure not ever going back to gluten. Also having a colonoscopy to be on the safe side..I am of that age anyway when a person needs one.

My regular Doc told me to eat toast... :blink:


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.

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

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Jay Heying replied to Jay Heying's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      6

      Celiac friendly probiotics

    2. - Florence Lillian replied to Jay Heying's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      6

      Celiac friendly probiotics

    3. - slkrav posted a topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      0

      Gluten free beer ?

    4. - cristiana replied to Colleen H's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      16

      Ibuprofen

    5. - Mari replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      5

      New here


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,885
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    KateFC
    Newest Member
    KateFC
    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

    • Jay Heying
      Thank you so much for the advice!! I will try to make a batch this weekend. Have a great weekend,
    • Florence Lillian
      In response to your questions regarding probiotics.  I have had Celiac for 40 years.  Stomach issues: digestion, IBS to chronic constipation, bloat after eating anything.  I was unable to eat a healthy variety of foods, tried probiotics supplements - some made me worse, others made no difference.  After reading about people with Crones, IBS, etc, who made their own probiotics I started making Milk Kefir: not water Kefir. There are 10 probiotics in milk KEFIR. After 3 weeks I was able to eat more, no gas, no IBS.  If you have a computer just ask for videos on making milk Kefir. I branched out and make my own Kombucha for even more probiotics. I do not make my yogurt because there are only about four probiotics in that. I started this when I was 82 and I still make my own Kefir and Kombucha. My stomach issues were fixed with the Milk Kefir alone. If you decide to try making it, make certain you order MILK GRAINS. The finished product tastes a bit like Buttermilk. I hope this helps in your journey to good health.
    • slkrav
      Help me out here. Lauren Dam gluten-free beer from Spain is listed as gluten free. Yet its made from Barley Malt. I thought barley and any form had gluten. Anybody have any more information about it?
    • cristiana
      Ferritin levels.  And see what your hemoglobin looks like too, that will tell you if you are anemic?  You can have 'low normal' levels that will not be flagged by blood tests.  I had 'low normal' levels, my lab reading was. c12, just over what was considered normal, but I had small benign lesion on my tongue, and sometimes a sore mouth, and a consultant maxillofacial ordered an iron infusion for me as he felt my levels were too low and if he  raised them to 40, it would help.   Because you are not feeling 100% it might be worth looking at your levels, then discussing with your doctor if they are low normal.  But I stress, don't supplement iron without your levels being monitored, too much is dangerous.
    • Mari
      Hi Katht -  I sympathize with your struggles in following a gluten-free diet and lifestyle. I found out that I had Celiac Disease a few months before I turned 70. I just turned 89 and it has taken me almost 20 years to attain a fairly normal intestinal  function. I also lost a lot of weight, down to 100 lb. down from about 140 lb. What Trents wrote you was very true for me. I am still elimination foods from my diet. One person suggested you keep a food diary and that is a good idea but it is probably best just to do an elimination diet. There are several ne and maybe one for celiacs. I used one for a while and started with plain rice and zucchini and then added back other foods to see if I reacted or not. That helped a great deal but what I did not realise that it would only very small amounts of some foods to cause inflammation in my intestine. Within the last few years I have stopped eating any trace amounts of hot peppers, corn and soy(mostly in supplements) and nuts, (the corn in Tylenol was giving me stomach aches and the nuts were causing foot pains). Starting an elimination diet with white rice is better than brown rice that has some natural toxins. In addition it is very important to drink sufficient plain water. You can find out how much to drink for your height and weight online. I do have difficulty drinking 48 ounces of water but just recently have found an electrolyte supplement that helps me stay well hydrated, Adding the water and electrolytes may reduce muscle cramps and gag spams you wrote about. . Also buy some anti-gluten enzyme capsules to take with meals. I use GliadinX advertised here. These are a lot of things to do at one time as they reflect my 20 years of experience. I hope you do what you can manage to do over time. Good luck and take care.
×
×
  • 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.