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

How Long Do I Have To Wait For Improvement?


ula1234

Recommended Posts

ula1234 Newbie

Hello Everyone,

I am new on this site and was wondering if anyone could help me. I am diagnosing myself at this point because I've been to many doctors and none of them helped me so I am tired of spending the money. I have a few of the symptoms of Celiac disease (the worst being extreme constipation) and so I decided to start the gluten-free diet 6 days ago and see if there is any improvement. I figured it can't hurt. I was wondering how long do I have to wait to see improvement? I feel much better mentally already and I have enormous energy,my skin is clearing up too, but the constipation hasn't lifted. I also just read about Arrowhead Mills and Bob's Red Mill pancake mix contamination, and I had both for dinner for the past two days without knowing!v Could that possibly be the problem? Besides these two items I've been really careful. Also, I'm trying to avoid gluten products, but I am still eating some dairy and eggs and soy. Do you think it is a good idea to give it all up at once or to stick to just the gluten-free for a while longer?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



mftnchn Explorer

Hello Ula,

I am fairly new to this forum and also to the gluten-free diet (10 days), that is being as strict as possible re gluten free. Constipation was the issue that led to my doing the enterolab testing, with the results strongly positive.

Yesterday (day 9) I noticed some abdominal cramping, not really uncomfortable. That happened a bit this morning, and today a very soft stool, only 24 hours since the last one. That is encouraging to me.

However, I am prepared to wait weeks and even months to see the results. The gene testing for me was two DQ2 genes, and as I understand that from my reading, the tendency toward more severe symptoms and longer recovery.

I don't think you will get clear improvement unless your diet is strict and consistently gluten free. My allergist told me to be very strict for three months, at which point many of his patients are able to sense clear of improvement beginning. Clinical improvement then confirms a patient is on the right track. He said the recovery for the intestine is a very slow process.

mftnchn Explorer

One more thing: I have also been dairy free as well as gluten-free for 10 days. (Enterolab test for casein also elevated)

ula1234 Newbie
One more thing: I have also been dairy free as well as gluten-free for 10 days. (Enterolab test for casein also elevated)

Thanks for replying mftnchn. I know that I'm being impatient, it's just that I had this problem for so long and now I'm anxious for results. Starting tomorrow I'm stopping dairy and eggs too maybe that is also the problem. I will also not buy anymore packaged foods that say "gluten-free" and risk it. I'll just have to live on fruits and vegetables, rice and fish.

mftnchn Explorer

Understandable! I think we've all been there.

I also found another thread here on constipation, under the post-treatment thread. You might find that helpful too.

abdab Newbie

I never had problems with constipation, in fact usually the opposite.

But it took about 10 weeks of strict gluten free diet for me to return to 'normal'.

mamaloca2 Apprentice
Hello Everyone,

I am new on this site and was wondering if anyone could help me. I am diagnosing myself at this point because I've been to many doctors and none of them helped me so I am tired of spending the money. I have a few of the symptoms of Celiac disease (the worst being extreme constipation) and so I decided to start the gluten-free diet 6 days ago and see if there is any improvement. I figured it can't hurt. I was wondering how long do I have to wait to see improvement? I feel much better mentally already and I have enormous energy,my skin is clearing up too, but the constipation hasn't lifted. I also just read about Arrowhead Mills and Bob's Red Mill pancake mix contamination, and I had both for dinner for the past two days without knowing!v Could that possibly be the problem? Besides these two items I've been really careful. Also, I'm trying to avoid gluten products, but I am still eating some dairy and eggs and soy. Do you think it is a good idea to give it all up at once or to stick to just the gluten-free for a while longer?

My daughter also had condtipation problems that did not go away until I took her off dairy also. I heard celiac's are often lactose intolerant, at least until completely healed.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



confused Community Regular

I had bad problems with C, when i went gluten free it did get better, but it did not get completely better til i gave up casein. Now I am very regular and go every morning, unless of course i have glutened myself or ate something with casein, or ate beans, I am completely fine. It is so nice not to have the hard stomach anymore, but the one that jiggles lol.

So i would suggest giving up dairy and i bet within like 5 days, u will feel better.

paula

hathor Contributor

It took me longer than six days, I can tell you that. I noticed some change after about 3 weeks. I'm still not all the way there. I am reacting to other things I haven't identified yet, am getting some second hand gluten (or casein or egg or soy or yeast :huh: ), or my system is still healing and learning to function normally.

If you give up anything else at this point, do the casein. It has a major constipating effect on many people. Soy, I've learned, has the same effect on me, but I haven't heard many others discuss this. I don't know that egg has such an effect; it just makes me sick to my stomach. I don't notice an effect from yeast, but Enterolab says I have enought antibodies to it that I should avoid it.

After 10 days on a gluten free diet, I noticed some improvements & decided to do the Enterolab testing. You might consider this. It is expensive but it can help with your need to stay the course long enough to get results. I thought it would be hard for me to keep up with gluten-free if I didn't have something in writing. (Obviously, this would not be true for those who have dramatic positive results from going off gluten. You folks know.) You also can find out from them if you need to avoid these other things.

Archived

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

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

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - trents replied to GlutenFreeChef's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      9

      Blood Test for Celiac wheat type matters?

    2. - Scott Adams replied to GlutenFreeChef's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      9

      Blood Test for Celiac wheat type matters?

    3. - Wheatwacked replied to GlutenFreeChef's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      9

      Blood Test for Celiac wheat type matters?

    4. - jenniber replied to tiffanygosci's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      5

      Celiac support is hard to find

    5. - RMJ replied to TheDHhurts's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      need help understanding testing result for Naked Nutrition Creatine please

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,122
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Sarer
    Newest Member
    Sarer
    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

    • trents
      Wheatwacked, are you speaking of the use of potassium bromide and and azodicarbonamide as dough modifiers being controlling factor for what? Do you refer to celiac reactions to gluten or thyroid disease, kidney disease, GI cancers? 
    • Scott Adams
      Excess iodine supplements can cause significant health issues, primarily disrupting thyroid function. My daughter has issues with even small amounts of dietary iodine. While iodine is essential for thyroid hormone production, consistently consuming amounts far above the tolerable upper limit (1,100 mcg/day for adults) from high-dose supplements can trigger both hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism, worsen autoimmune thyroid diseases like Hashimoto's, and lead to goiter. Other side effects include gastrointestinal distress. The risk is highest for individuals with pre-existing thyroid conditions, and while dietary iodine rarely reaches toxic levels, unsupervised high-dose supplementation is dangerous and should only be undertaken with medical guidance to avoid serious complications. It's best to check with your doctor before supplementing iodine.
    • Wheatwacked
      In Europe they have banned several dough modifiers potassium bromide and and azodicarbonamide.  Both linked to cancers.  Studies have linked potassium bromide to kidney, thyroid, and gastrointestinal cancers.  A ban on it in goes into effect in California in 2027. I suspect this, more than a specific strain of wheat to be controlling factor.  Sourdough natural fermentation conditions the dough without chemicals. Iodine was used in the US as a dough modifier until the 1970s. Since then iodine intake in the US dropped 50%.  Iodine is essential for thyroid hormones.  Thyroid hormone use for hypothyroidism has doubled in the United States from 1997 to 2016.   Clinical Thyroidology® for the Public In the UK, incidently, prescriptions for the thyroid hormone levothyroxine have increased by more than 12 million in a decade.  The Royal Pharmaceutical Society's official journal Standard thyroid tests will not show insufficient iodine intake.  Iodine 24 Hour Urine Test measures iodine excretion over a full day to evaluate iodine status and thyroid health. 75 year old male.  I tried adding seaweed into my diet and did get improvement in healing, muscle tone, skin; but in was not enough and I could not sustain it in my diet at the level intake I needed.  So I supplement 600 mcg Liquid Iodine (RDA 150 to 1000 mcg) per day.  It has turbocharged my recovery from 63 years of undiagnosed celiac disease.  Improvement in healing a non-healing sebaceous cyst. brain fog, vision, hair, skin, nails. Some with dermatitis herpetiformis celiac disease experience exacerbation of the rash with iodine. The Wolff-Chaikoff Effect Crying Wolf?
    • jenniber
      same! how amazing you have a friend who has celiac disease. i find myself wishing i had someone to talk about it with other than my partner (who has been so supportive regardless)
    • RMJ
      They don’t give a sample size (serving size is different from sample size) so it is hard to tell just what the result means.  However, the way the result is presented  does look like it is below the limit of what their test can measure, so that is good.
×
×
  • 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.