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

Itching


wowzer

Recommended Posts

wowzer Community Regular

I have been gluten free since the beginning of the year. I've always tended to have dry skin for as long as I can remember. I keep trying different soap, body wash, shampoo. It just seems like everything makes me itch. I have definitely had some benefits from this diet. At least the female area stopped itching. I was wondering if anyone had any ideas? I'm kind of at a loss. Wendy

  • 2 weeks later...

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



MGP2345 Newbie
I have been gluten free since the beginning of the year. I've always tended to have dry skin for as long as I can remember. I keep trying different soap, body wash, shampoo. It just seems like everything makes me itch. I have definitely had some benefits from this diet. At least the female area stopped itching. I was wondering if anyone had any ideas? I'm kind of at a loss. Wendy

I've been diagnosed with Celiac & DH since October, 2005. Your description describes where I was with my case some 6 years ago. The itching would go and come--disappearing for months at a time. My doctor(s) initially thought I was have a reaction to something in my environment. I also developed severe acne on my face, which was wild because I never had acne as a teenager. Then I was told I had Rosacea. I eventually started have patches break out in different places: both elbows, both ears, and especially my female area. After about 4 years I started experiencing a fiery, blistery rash in a circular patch on the outside of my thigh. The itching became so horrific at times I thought I'd go mad--scratching until I bled. At other times it was just a constant irritation. The patches would show up for months at a time and then completely disappear. The outbreak areas were not always constant and of course the severity fluctuated. I was treated for 2 years by a dermatologist before I was diagnosed with Celiac. After the Celiac diagnosis the dermatologist finally tested me for DH. Once I started with the gluten-free diet all of the break out area improved. However, after being gluten-free from 6 months, I started having additional area of breakout. the spots are usually now all over my face, my elbows and sprinkled all over my back. I've been on Dapsone for short spurts (less than a month) three times in the past 16 months. I've always had quick respose to Dapsone with my spots usually disappearing within a few days.

flowergirl Rookie

Wowser, I had the DH terrible itching that MGP discribed a few yrs ago. It was horrible but it went away when I changed a few things in my lifestyle. Didn't know anything about Celiac then. A month after going gluten-free I started to get dry skin again. Especially on my legs. I increased my intake of flaxseed, salmon and coconut oil and this week I've tried some coconut oil on the dry skin. It works well and gets absorbed quickly. Itches are gone. I recommed you try it. Let us know, please.

Flowergirl

wowzer Community Regular

Thank you both of you for your input. I keep trying to explain to doctors, that I think I have DH, but they don't really agree. My family doctor did give me the celiac blood panel, but it came out negative. When I think about it, I subconsciously had been avoiding gluten for a long time. I was a cookie freak, would buy a package eat one and end up throwing them away. I have had 2 biopsies in the female area. One came back eczema and the other spongiotic dermatitis. I did make an appointment with a dermatologist. I do have a little sister that was diagnosed with celiac at about a year old. I'm to the point, I don't have to have an official diagnosis. I'm so glad to find people that understand. I'm still in the learning process of how to eat. I love salmon. I have to say, that even though I've only been gluten free since the first of the year, I seem more sensitive to it. I was using a lip gloss that got me. Threw it out. I am still learning.

BRUMI1968 Collaborator

I had terrible itching without a rash down my sides, above my hip bones, on my spine, and on the back of my head. BUT, I also had a horrible rough patch of skin on both ankles that itched me into submission whenever they hit the ground (i.e., sitting "Indian style"). ALL of the itching went away when I quit gluten, along with my canker sores.

Now I'm itchy again, just down my sides and on the back of my head. I feel tiny invisible bumps there. These are the places the hot shower water hits me the most, and since I keep my hands on my sides, kindof hugging myself in the shower (that sounds weird), it holds the hot water on my side, right along my rib cage. So I wonder if it's chlorine in hot water.

Could that be yours too? I'm going to the doc soon about it...I was so excited when the itching had stopped. It was profound. I still have not gotten the rough spots back.

Good luck to you.

I'll let you know if I hear anything.

Sherri

Guest starmiller

Hi. I have been itching intensely for about 4 months. My troubled spots are my hands, wrists (symmetrical) and my left ear. I have been gluten-free for 2 months and the open sores have healed, although I still have attacks that baffle me. I am so precise with my diet, eating only whole foods with no spices. Two days ago, after eating salted nuts and having a major attack, I decided to remove all salt and dairy as well. Those (I think) are the last irritants to remove that I know of. Today, even though my hands are very dry - the blisters are all dried up. I actually see an end in sight for the first time in months. Does anyone have some insight for me. Am I on the right track?! I need my hands for my job. I am a massage therapist at a major hospital and work with very sick people. I use only grape seed oil to massage with - no lotions for fear of gluten in them. Looking for help.

Starmiller

  • 2 months later...
SarahCC Rookie

I also have super dry skin and DH, I have found that Aveeno as a body wash doesn't dry me out as bad because it doesn't have soap in it. My doctor even said you can use shaving cream as a body wash. All the soap does is take the oil off of your skin, so your body wash does not have to have "soap" in it. I highly reccomend it, especially if you can find fragrance free Aveeno. Now for me it doesn't stop the itching but at least I dont have to lather my body with lotion 4-5 times a day! Good luck.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



zagadka Newbie
Now I'm itchy again, just down my sides and on the back of my head. I feel tiny invisible bumps there. These are the places the hot shower water hits me the most, and since I keep my hands on my sides, kindof hugging myself in the shower (that sounds weird), it holds the hot water on my side, right along my rib cage.

AH! me too! and i do the same thing in the shower! are yours tiny flesh colored bumps? mine are sporadic loners. i get them on my tummy and in the crack of my back on my spine and sometimes on my arms- they're SO annoying. no matter how much i scrub with my "michael jackson" glove, they don't leave.

i have a patch on the back side of my hip- they were a large cluster about 5 inches wide and 3 inches tall. several years ago i noticed it and remember thinking "what IS this and where did it come from?!" since i've been trying very hard to be gluten free, it looks like it has gone down.

for a while i thought i was having probs with wool or laundry detergent because my shoulders were SO itchy, they would get big bumps that wouldn't leave, and now they've left these very unattractive dark scars. just in time for vacation...thanks body!

zagadka Newbie

OH!

i recommend trying Trader Joe's Midsummer's Night Cream. It's all natural and gluten free as far as i can tell on the label. I LOVE it. it's cheap, too!!!

wowzer Community Regular

Thanks for all the replies. I thought Aveeno had oats in it. Is there something they carry that doesn't? I've used Aveeno bath trying to get rid of itching only to make it worse. My dry patches are on the side of my legs and rear end.

dally099 Contributor

hi, i can totally understand, i get rashes on my back, my thighs and i get the symetrical thing going on my hands and wrists and it drives me nuts, i dont think its accuall DH but if i get glutened it acts up, i am discovering some other allergies as well, soy, and possilby dairy. i have to start looking into my soaps now as well. good luck!!

Born2run2 Rookie
:rolleyes:<_< I can totally relate to you. I got to itching so bad I would practically draw blood. A gluten free dairy free diet has done wonders for me. Aveeno seems to help, but I don't get the stuff with oatmeal, I get the stuff for babies. I have terribly sensitive skin. Judy
Joan (Maine) Newbie

I'm wary of Aveeno....gluten??? Iodized salt will aggravate DH. For me dairy is also and irritant. I am hopeful that someday dairy can be back in my life after my intestines heal although I have gluten free for six months.

Vanacreme at Walmart Pharmacy is wonderfully soothing and is formulated without many irritants...no precription although they may hav to overnight order it for you....it is not expensive. If you have Dermatitis Herpetiformis, you are probably sensitive to many chemicals and cleaning products.....be careful and cautious. I am VERY careful to screen my personal care products. Always pantiliners and other products are known to be irritating to many women.

Joan

  • 1 month later...
donna w-7 Newbie
I'm wary of Aveeno....gluten??? Iodized salt will aggravate DH. For me dairy is also and irritant. I am hopeful that someday dairy can be back in my life after my intestines heal although I have gluten free for six months.

Vanacreme at Walmart Pharmacy is wonderfully soothing and is formulated without many irritants...no precription although they may hav to overnight order it for you....it is not expensive. If you have Dermatitis Herpetiformis, you are probably sensitive to many chemicals and cleaning products.....be careful and cautious. I am VERY careful to screen my personal care products. Always pantiliners and other products are known to be irritating to many women.

Joan

donna w-7 Newbie

do you itch as though things are crawling under the skin? do you get white heads on your skin that go away 1-2 hours later as though they were never there? do you have severe headaches? my son is waiting on test results, i have lots of questions, do any of the celiacs have heart deformitites thank you

little d Enthusiast
do you itch as though things are crawling under the skin? do you get white heads on your skin that go away 1-2 hours later as though they were never there? do you have severe headaches? my son is waiting on test results, i have lots of questions, do any of the celiacs have heart deformitites thank you

I do get the crawling under the skin feeling, the heads do look white but when i popped a blister it was clear, headaches not so much, but yes I do get them. I am going to the Derm on friday hopefully I will have some blisters so they can biopsy them. and I don't think that I have any heart deformities that I know of just a little high choloesterol.

donna

  • 2 years later...
triplbjt1 Newbie

I too am having the same itching problem... I itch on my shoulders, back and my whole arms... Morningm noon and night....

I am Celiac and just found out about 4 months ago... I am eating a gluten free diet and I am using Shampoo and Soap that is Gluten free but no help from them...

There has to be an answer out there somewhere to help with this maddness...

If anyone has any please pass it on...

Bev

mushroom Proficient

I too am having the same itching problem... I itch on my shoulders, back and my whole arms... Morningm noon and night....

I am Celiac and just found out about 4 months ago... I am eating a gluten free diet and I am using Shampoo and Soap that is Gluten free but no help from them...

There has to be an answer out there somewhere to help with this maddness...

If anyone has any please pass it on...

Bev

I would suspect another food intolerance is causing the itching. I itched like crazy when I quit eating gluten. Soy turned out to be the main problem, potatoes the secondary problem. Keep a food diary and found out what you are eating a lot of (I had no idea how much soy I was eating) and eliminate that. If that doesn't work, go through all the major food allergens (corn, diary, eggs, etc.) one at a time and see if it makes a difference.

  • 3 weeks later...
choker28 Newbie

I too am having the same itching problem... I itch on my shoulders, back and my whole arms... Morningm noon and night....

I am Celiac and just found out about 4 months ago... I am eating a gluten free diet and I am using Shampoo and Soap that is Gluten free but no help from them...

There has to be an answer out there somewhere to help with this maddness...

If anyone has any please pass it on...

Bev

i hade the same problem had to eliminate dairy products tp

  • 2 weeks later...
torimuse Rookie

All research I keep doing on DH lists big, red blister-type bumps, but this thread mentioned tiny flesh-colored, but extremely itchy bumps. I noticed these "rough patches" a long while back (can't remember when). I've been gluten free for just over a week now, and I'm having a hard time finding them, when they used to be just always there. Could this have been a mild form of DH?

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,552
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Jennifer Carp
    Newest Member
    Jennifer Carp
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):



  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):


  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Mari
      I think, after reading this, that you areso traumatized by not being able yo understand what your medical advisors have been  what medical conditions are that you would like to find a group of people who also feel traumatized who would agree with you and also support you. You are on a crusade much as the way the US Cabinet  official, the Health Director of our nation is in trying to change what he considers outdated and incorrect health advisories. He does not have the education, background or experience to be in the position he occupies and is not making beneficial decisions. That man suffered a terrible trauma early in his life when his father was assonated. We see now how he developed and worked himself into a powerful position.  Unless you are willing to take some advice or  are willing to use a few of the known methods of starting on a path to better health then not many of us on this Celiac Forum will be able to join you in a continuing series of complaints about medical advisors.    I am almost 90 years old. I am strictly gluten free. I use 2 herbs to help me stay as clear minded as possible. You are not wrong in complaining about medical practitioners. You might be more effective with a clearer mind, less anger and a more comfortable life if you would just try some of the suggestions offered by our fellow celiac volunteers.  
    • Jmartes71
      Thus has got to STOP , medical bit believing us! I literally went through 31 years thinking it was just a food allergy as its downplayed by medical if THEY weren't the ones who diagnosed us! Im positive for HLA-DQ2 which is first celiac patient per Iran and Turkey. Here in the States especially in Cali its why do you feel that way? Why do you think your celiac? Your not eating gluten so its something else.Medical caused me depression. I thought I was safe with my former pcp for 25 years considering i thought everything I went through and going through will be available when I get fired again for health. Health not write-ups my health always come back when you're better.Im not and being tossed away at no fault to my own other than shitty genes.I was denied disability because person said he didn't know how to classify me! I said Im celiac, i have ibs, hernia, sciatica, high blood pressure, in constant pain have skin and eye issues and menopause intensified everything. With that my celiac nightmare began to reprove my disregarded disease to a bunch of clowns who think they are my careteam when they said I didn't have...I feel Im still breathing so I can fight this so no body else has to deal with this nightmare. Starting over with " new care team" and waisting more time on why I think I am when diagnosed in 1994 before food eliminated from my diet. P.s everything i went through I did write to medical board, so pretty sure I will continue to have a hard time.
    • knitty kitty
      @Scatterbrain, Thiamine Vitamin B1 and amino acid Taurine work together.  Our bodies can make Taurine from meats consumed.  Our bodies cannot make Thiamine and must consume thiamine from food.  Meat is the best source of B vitamins like Thiamine.   Vegetarians may not make sufficient taurine since they don't eat meat sources of taurine.  Seaweed is the best vegetarian source of taurine. Vegetarians may not consume sufficient Thiamine since few veggies are good sources.  Whole grains, legumes, and nuts and seeds contain thiamine.  Many of these sources can be hard to digest and absorb for people with Celiac disease.   You may find taking the forms of thiamine called Benfotiamine or TTFD (tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide) and a B Complex will give the benefits you're looking for better than taurine alone.  
    • knitty kitty
      @Jmartes71, I went to Doterra's site and had a look around.  The Doterra TerraZyme supplement really jumped out at me.  Since we, as Celiacs, often have digestive problems, I looked at the ingredients.  The majority of the enzymes in this supplement are made using black mold, Aspergillus!  Other enzymes are made by yeast Saccharomyces!  Considering the fact that Celiac often have permeable intestines (leaky gut syndrome), I would be very hesitant to take a product like this.  Although there may not be live black mold or yeast in the product, the enzymes may still cause an immune system response which would definitely cause inflammation throughout the body.   Skin, eyes, and intestines are all made from the same basic type of cells.  Your skin on the outside and eyes can reflect how irritated the intestines are on the inside.  Our skin, eyes, and intestines all need the same vitamins and nutrients to be healthy:  Vitamin A, Niacin B3 and Tryptophan, Riboflavin B2, Biotin B7, Vitamin C, and Omega Threes.  Remember that the eight B vitamins work together.  Just taking high doses of just one, vitamin like B12, can cause a deficiency in the others.  Taking high doses of B12 can mask a Folate B9 deficiency.  If you take B12, please take a B Complex, too.  Thiamine B1 can be taken in high doses safely without toxicity.  Thiamine is needed by itself to produce energy so every cell in the body can function, but Thiamine also works with the other B vitamins to make life sustaining enzymes and digestive enzymes.  Deficiencies in either Niacin, Vitamin C, or Thiamine can cause digestive problems resulting in Pellagra, Scurvy, and Gastrointestinal Beriberi.   If you change your diet, you will change your intestinal microbiome.  Following the Autoimmune Protocol Diet, a Paleo diet, will starve out SIBO bacteria.  Thiamine keeps bacteria in check so they don't get out of control as in SIBO.  Thiamine also keeps MOLDS and Yeasts from overgrowth.   Menopause symptoms and menstrual irregularities are symptomatic of low Vitamin D.   Doctors are not as knowledgeable about malnutrition as we need them to be.  A nutritionist or dietician would be more helpful.   Take control of your diet and nutrition.  Quit looking for a pill that's going to make you feel better overnight.  The Celiac journey is a marathon, not a sprint.   "Let food be your medicine, and let medicine be your food."
    • RUKen
      The Lindt (Lindor) dairy-free oat milk truffles are definitely gluten-free, and (last time I checked) so are the white chocolate truffles and the mint chocolate truffles. 
×
×
  • 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.