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

On A Baby?


TygerCubs

Recommended Posts

TygerCubs Rookie

Hi,

To try to make a long story short my family has been gluten-free for a few months but no one has had an official diagnosis. I have a 9 year old a 3 year old and a 16 month old girl. The baby has been gluten-free more because the house is gluten free than because she had symptoms.

Then yesterday we got glutened. My oldest daughter was up all night with stomach pain and now my 16 mo has an itchy rash. She has had a rash around her neck and upper chest for a long time but after going gluten-free it has subsided - I thought I just finally found the right ombination of shampoo, soap and bubble bath but now I am starting to wonder. My 9yo always got itchy rashes too. They aren't like blisters or hives though, they are more like little, sightly raised bumps over a reddish area. Right now the baby has a few spots on her neck that have litte scabs from her scratching.

Could this be DH? Can babies and kids get it? And can it be milder than what is usually described?

I guess time will tel ultimately, if a gluten-free diet works or not!

I thank you for any information!

Marie


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



chrissy Collaborator

doesn't really sound like DH.

  • 2 weeks later...
Granny Garbonzo Apprentice
<br />Hi,<br /><br />To try to make a long story short my family has been gluten-free for a few months but no one has had an official diagnosis. I have a 9 year old a 3 year old and a 16 month old girl. The baby has been gluten-free more because the house is gluten free than because she had symptoms. <br />Then yesterday we got glutened. My oldest daughter was up all night with stomach pain and now my 16 mo has an itchy rash. She has had a rash around her neck and upper chest for a long time but after going gluten-free it has subsided - I thought I just finally found the right ombination of shampoo, soap and bubble bath but now I am starting to wonder. My 9yo always got itchy rashes too. They aren't like blisters or hives though, they are more like little, sightly raised bumps over a reddish area. Right now the baby has a few spots on her neck that have litte scabs from her scratching.<br /><br />Could this be DH? Can babies and kids get it? And can it be milder than what is usually described?<br /><br />I guess time will tel ultimately, if a gluten-free diet works or not!<br /><br />I thank you for any information!<br /><br />Marie<br />
<br /><br /><br />

My grown daughter had rashes as a baby, but we didn't know that myself, she, my mother, and my older daughter all had celiac disease until she was about 8 or 9 years old. She had a rash pretty badly too, and all those years no doctor ever once suggested she could have celiac disease. I also had Rosacea on my face and no doctor ever told me about the connection between rosacea and celiac disease. Over the years, it's been my observation that doctors are only helpful for some things and not others. No one knows our bodies like we do. We all need to become informed people who live as though our lives depend on our self care and not on some doctor's care.

Try as we might, now and then we still get some gluten in our diets and my adult daughter still gets the rash sometimes, but not as much. I feel for you dealing with the rash, especially when the weather is hot and sweaty, and the "unseen" aspects of kids who are misbehaving or grumpy or whiny because they don't feel good and are too young to communicate their feelings. They may not even really know that their pain and yucky in the gut feelings are not normal, since they have probably had those feelings most their little short lives.

At least you can be very glad that you are realizing while the kids are young that gluten is a problem. This seems to be a difficult step for many people to take, often parents or individuals confronted with the possibility of Celiac Disease will spend countless dollars and time and stress on doctoring or do anything to deny that they have celiac disease, as though it were the worst possible thing to have. Really, once your household becomes accustomed to locating resources and shopping and cooking gluten free, it becomes very easy and normal feeling.

I really think we with celiac disease are somehow fortunate, in that we have had to take a hard look at our health, and many of us have acquired much healthier overall eating habits, and much more knowledge of our bodies and general knowledge of nutrition and healing than most people. As a result, we may actually end up living healthier and/or longer lives than the average person.

  • 1 month later...
cornflakegirl-1980 Newbie
<br /><br /><br />

My grown daughter had rashes as a baby, but we didn't know that myself, she, my mother, and my older daughter all had celiac disease until she was about 8 or 9 years old. She had a rash pretty badly too, and all those years no doctor ever once suggested she could have celiac disease. I also had Rosacea on my face and no doctor ever told me about the connection between rosacea and celiac disease. Over the years, it's been my observation that doctors are only helpful for some things and not others. No one knows our bodies like we do. We all need to become informed people who live as though our lives depend on our self care and not on some doctor's care.

Try as we might, now and then we still get some gluten in our diets and my adult daughter still gets the rash sometimes, but not as much. I feel for you dealing with the rash, especially when the weather is hot and sweaty, and the "unseen" aspects of kids who are misbehaving or grumpy or whiny because they don't feel good and are too young to communicate their feelings. They may not even really know that their pain and yucky in the gut feelings are not normal, since they have probably had those feelings most their little short lives.

At least you can be very glad that you are realizing while the kids are young that gluten is a problem. This seems to be a difficult step for many people to take, often parents or individuals confronted with the possibility of Celiac Disease will spend countless dollars and time and stress on doctoring or do anything to deny that they have celiac disease, as though it were the worst possible thing to have. Really, once your household becomes accustomed to locating resources and shopping and cooking gluten free, it becomes very easy and normal feeling.

I really think we with celiac disease are somehow fortunate, in that we have had to take a hard look at our health, and many of us have acquired much healthier overall eating habits, and much more knowledge of our bodies and general knowledge of nutrition and healing than most people. As a result, we may actually end up living healthier and/or longer lives than the average person.

My mother was diagnost some years ago with Celiac disease and we also suspect that my grandmother had it as well. Though I have been tested by bloodwork it came back negative for this disease. I was tested after my daughter was born which has been within about a year ago. The strage thing is between me, my 17 month old daughter,my mother and grandmother we all have super sensitive skin. We all will break out either on the face, the stomach, scalp, and limbs.

My skin was crazy itchy when I was pregnant. I just thought I had psorisis it was on my mouth and the folds of the arms and the base of my neck. I was in orbit. And now my baby has always had rashes from the time she was born not to mention a bloated belly and a horrible immune system and time to time cranky and iritable. I tried to get her doctor to test her for celiac disease when she was 4 or five months old and her dr didn't seem too interested in that. So later I saw another doctor in the same practice and he is having her tested (though I had to really do some convincing). As a matter of fact today we will be going to have the blood work done. So I deffinatly think she has it especially since this thread about rashes.

Jess

lovegrov Collaborator

I would doubt it.

richard

ravenwoodglass Mentor
Hi,

To try to make a long story short my family has been gluten-free for a few months but no one has had an official diagnosis. I have a 9 year old a 3 year old and a 16 month old girl. The baby has been gluten-free more because the house is gluten free than because she had symptoms.

Then yesterday we got glutened. My oldest daughter was up all night with stomach pain and now my 16 mo has an itchy rash. She has had a rash around her neck and upper chest for a long time but after going gluten-free it has subsided - I thought I just finally found the right ombination of shampoo, soap and bubble bath but now I am starting to wonder. My 9yo always got itchy rashes too. They aren't like blisters or hives though, they are more like little, sightly raised bumps over a reddish area. Right now the baby has a few spots on her neck that have litte scabs from her scratching.

Could this be DH? Can babies and kids get it? And can it be milder than what is usually described?

I guess time will tel ultimately, if a gluten-free diet works or not!

I thank you for any information!

Marie

Considering that you all got glutened, your house is gluten-free, the baby had a rash before the house became gluten-free, that rash cleared up and now you guys have rashes. Yes this is definately connected. Whether it is actually DH I don't know and you would need to have them biopsy the area next to the rash when the rash was active to tell. Sounds like you did the right thing making your home a gluten free haven.

April in KC Apprentice

I think it's possible. Most docs will probably not think babies can have it. Here's an abstract about a 30-month-old with DH.

Open Original Shared Link

There is another abstract below that about how DH is a "chameleon" with different appearances in different people.

I know my DH doesn't look exactly like the pictures I see. It is in a "classic" location (extensor surfaces of elbows).

Worth noting, one big patch of my 10-month old's facial "eczema" cleared when I went on a gluten-free diet. And this was the worst of his patches. He has another persistent patch we're still trying to figure out / clear (think it may be corn).

Prior to being gluten-free, I had TERRIBLE itchiness during my pregnancies, particularly this last one. The doc thought it was PUPPPS, but thought it was very strange for it to occur starting in the 10th week. My shins were very itchy, but didn't really show a rash. But my back, which was also itchy, did show a rash that was symmetrically distributed across my back in a christmas-tree-like shape. Was it DH? Don't know.

My suggestion? Photograph or video it. You never know when it will come in handy...maybe decades from now when your kids have kids and you're trying to convince their spouses to try a gluten-free diet. Also, when I talk to docs, I find that they "believe" images more than they believe words.

My dumb little pictures of my elbow bumps helped me out at the GI's office today. And photos of my 10-month-old's bleeding eczema also have helped in some situations.

April


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ptkds Community Regular

Well, my toddler had a "diaper" rash that wouldn't go away with ANY meds. When we discovered she had celiac disease and she started the gluten-free diet, the "diaper" rash disapeared. I saw a dermatologist today because I seem to get itchy spots alot, esp when I get glutened. He said it didn't look like DH, but it did look like it was related to my celiac disease. He said the only way to control it was to stay gluten-free, and he gave me a very strong steriod cream to help when I do break out.

IMO, you should keep your dc on a gluten-free diet. It sounds like your dd may have a gluten problem.

ptkds

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. - trents replied to Francis M's topic in Gluten-Free Restaurants
      1

      The Happy Tart review

    2. - Francis M posted a topic in Gluten-Free Restaurants
      1

      The Happy Tart review

    3. - trents replied to Colleen H's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      10

      Ibuprofen

    4. - Colleen H replied to Colleen H's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      10

      Ibuprofen


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,848
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Francis M
    Newest Member
    Francis M
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Who's Online (See full list)


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Was the card itself lost or just the record or both?
    • Francis M
      We were flabergasted that the owner would not acknowledge a $50 e-gift card I purchased for my celiac wife. My wife tried to open it in the store and was informed there had been a system change and they could not find the record. No worries, she was told, just talk to management. Six months later, and numerous absurd back and forths, and the owner literally informs me there have been "bad actors", so she can't make good on this lost gift card. In other words, she accused me of lying and committing fraud... over $50! Please be careful with your orders and purchases here.
    • trents
      Yes, some people do get withdrawal from gluten but gluten withdrawal doesn't usually cause gut pain. Maybe more like general body aches and discomfort. We have articles on gluten withdrawal on this forum. You might do a search for them. Applesauce is very acidic and some brands have added vitamin C (ascorbic acid) which makes them more acidic. This can damage the stomach lining if you eat it too often. Especially if your stomach lining is already compromised. Ibuprofen inhibits the body's ability to rebuild the stomach's protective mucosal lining. That's why it can cause peptic ulcers. As strange as it may sound, low level irritation/inflammation stimulates the body to rebuild the stomach lining. There are two steps in this rebuilding process known as COX 1 and COX 2. Ibuprofen represses both COX 1 and COX 2. Celecoxcib, a prescription anti inflammatory, inhibits only COX 2, making it less likely to cause damage to the gut lining.
    • Colleen H
      Do you or anyone know alot about ibuprofen  I wasn't sure if I was eating too much apple sauce.   Something is making my pain so much worse  I'm referring to the intense pins and needles in my feet and lower legs.  Jaw actually has tardive dystonia and muscle spasms throughout my back Almost like an opposite effect that a pain reliever would do. I'm fairly new to this. Whatever is going on seems to be worsening  Do people get a withdrawal effect from gluten?  It's extremely painful 😖  I'll post that question or research on the site  Thank you everyone for responding 
    • Colleen H
×
×
  • 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.