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Top Five Reasons To Get A New Doctor


mamabear

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mamabear Explorer

When I started this thread a long time ago, I was being MOSTLY tongue in cheek!!......It is a sad state of affairs

when you read through it. It is obvious we need better listeners out there with medical degrees !!

Sorry for the "bump".......I just had to!


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  • Replies 183
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DeLina Newbie
When I started this thread a long time ago, I was being MOSTLY tongue in cheek!!......It is a sad state of affairs

when you read through it. It is obvious we need better listeners out there with medical degrees !!

Sorry for the "bump".......I just had to!

I really enjoyed reading this thread.........I read it twice because I was amazed, I know it was meant as irony and it is somewhat sad.......But it was nice to find out that I wasn't alone and that many others had the same twisted experience as I did

tinkonthebrink Newbie

I was diagnosed with IBS and then later with Crohn's -- neither was a correct diagnosis; the Crohn's diagnosis was jumped to b/c there is a family history, which I also believe was misdiagnosis. I believe there actually is a family history of misdiagnosed celiac disease. I have been given multitudes of meds which not only didn't work but often made me ill themselves. I had endoscopies, gastropscopies, barium enemas and am still paying the bills, even with insurance. I was told it was ridiculous to attempt to affect Crohn's with dietary changes (which I also think is absurd), but followed the SCD food regimen religiously for about 3 years, then gradually began adding other foods. Everything seemed fine and then suddenly I started feeling that I was getting a GI bug or food poisoning every couple of weeks, then every week, having constant watery diarrhea, then I went back to the SCD regimen and things started to improve. In the middle of this period, I was diagnosed with early ostopenia/osteoporosis, had 5 fractures, was given Boniva which made me incredibly ill for 3 full weeks (never took a second dose), was diagnosed with early rheumatoid arthritis, and still no one, of the many doctors, suggested Celiac disease. I began researching RA on the web, followed the recommended vegan diet and then happened on a connection to celiac disease. Every single thing clicked and I immediately tried experimenting with eating a nice piece of lovely homemade bread and a microbrewed delicious beer at a friend's house for dinner. Within 6 hours I was doubled over in pain, vomiting, running a fever and spent the rest of the night in the bathroom. I'm glad those foods were so delicious because that's the last time I'll eat them.

I now have an opportunity to move to a job that I've wanted but resisted because I will lose my current insurance benefits. I haven't bothered to confirm the diagnosis as it doesn't matter to me, as long as I avoid glutens completely I have been fine. I'm not only firing my own doctor, I'm firing all of them. I go to a naturopath and I eat really well. That seems to do it. I'm taking the job.

tinkonthebrink Newbie

I have to add one other thing about doctors -- they work in a system where insurance companies dictate which procedures you can have and which you can't (unless you want to pay for them on your own), where there is almost always financial pressure in an office to see a specific number of patients, which dictates how much time those patients will get, and where after a few years their early sincerity and optimism has devolved into exhaustion and burnout and disappointment. Doctors also have to be the mediators for the many many people who want to milk the system, either for disability or workman's comp (I'm in the US), for personal gratification and sympathy, or out of actual neurosis/psychosis. After awhile they come to feel that one of their first tasks is to determine if this is a "real" patient, and they understandably find symptoms that are as varied and unpredictable as Celiac disease to be very difficult within their framework. I have several friends who became doctors and I know they aren't the kinds of doctors they imagined themselves being when they started. And in a lot of ways, that isn't their fault.

samcarter Contributor

From my brief experience:

He asks, "Is this something that just recently started? Because that's not celiac."

he only runs ONE of the tests in the celiac panel because "it's cheaper and it's the most sensitive anyway."

He calls celiac disease "sprue". (This just shows how out of date he is with the latest literature.)

Calicoe Rookie
I'm not only firing my own doctor, I'm firing all of them. I go to a naturopath and I eat really well. That seems to do it. I'm taking the job.

I love this post! I feel the same way. However, today I am somewhat hopeful. I had an appointment with a new doctor - a young woman - who not only listened but seemed to click socially with me as we had a lot of shared interests. When I told her my theory on how I think celiac disease may have been dormant and then triggered by Giardia which some studies have said shares the same protein, she finished my thoughts and confirmed it. That's a great sign! She is going to test me for hypothyroidism, and she said she would test for celiac disease also. She asked me if I had ever seen an allergist, and if I had ever had a colonoscopy.. I told her no one had ever referred me. My next appointment is August 22nd. I feel hopeful about her. Of course, in keeping on topic with this thread, she did sneer at my other theory about Candida A. in my gut. Well,

no big surprise with allopathic doctors. :rolleyes:

But, I'm hopeful.

wilem008 Contributor
When you figure out gluten is a problem ON YOUR OWN through an elimination diet, and you go to the Dr for a celiac blood test, and she says, "You don't have diarrhea. You can't have celiac disease unless you have diarrhea."

When the blood test comes back negative and the Dr says, "See, I told you so. You have IBS. Let me give you a prescription."

When you insist that gluten is the problem, due to dietary response, and she says, "You don't want to be on a gluten-free diet. It's impossible."

OMG - This is SOOOO my story! Have had 3 doctors say the same thing to me - one of which was a gastro enterologist!!

All 3 have told me I have IBS and I have to eat more fibre and try metamucil. When I said the metamucil just makes my constipation worse (because it has wheat in it) they told me to take a laxitive....One doctor told me I should be on anti depressants! Im only drepressed after I eat gluten!!!!

*sigh*

Its so difficult! I know im better on a gluten-free diet. I know im not so constipated on a gluten-free diet, I dont get bloating and stomach cramps and I dont get depression....Im sticking to my diet!!


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greeneyes33 Newbie

After your positive biopsy and positive bloodwork, your dr says.....I dont really diagnose this too often because following a gluten free diet is hard.. :o

SarahbethBR Newbie

When they tell you your results can't be conclusive, after having an unnecessary endoscopy and bloodwork, because you haven't been eating wheat gluten. She didn't tell me before the tests because she didn't want me to risk having an allergic reaction.

Thanks for wasting my time and money, lady. You could have told me ahead of time that they wouldn't be conclusive.

  • 2 weeks later...
Damia66 Newbie

When the doctor tells you that they are going to do a blood test for celiac disease, and you tell them that it wont work cuz you havent eaten gluten in 8 months. But the doctor insists it will work. Really do you want a doctor that does not remember basic biology. When testing for antibodys first the body must have that (this case gluten) that makes your body attacks in your system. Duh....! I don't even have a college degree. :angry:

kkcarlton Newbie

Hi,

I am new here and love this forum and this particular thread. I just found out earlier this year that I am gluten intolerant. Not sure if I have celiac disease or what the exact difference is. Years ago I started going to regular GI docs and was told to take fiber, etc. and eventually that it's all in my head and I need to take an antidepressant. I have other issues, too, like candidiasis, other food intolerances, Epstein Barr and more.

I read somewhere in this thread that someone with undetected gluten intolerance also developed intolerances to most other health foods like fruits, veggies, etc. The doctor who detected the gluten intolerance said the true food intolerances are gluten (and wheat), soy, eggs, and dairy. Any other reactions to foods are as a result of the damage eating those five foods have caused. A friend of mine in Germany who is a naturopath agrees. In the past, before I knew about the gluten intolerance, I used to get ELISA food allergy tests. I believed them and in rotation diets and such. However, last year I had one done by a reputable lab in Germany and exactly a week later the same test was done again with some additional foods tested and within that week I had differences. Some foods that showed up non-reactive on the first test were highly reactive on the second test and the other way around. After that I did some research and found that this is quite common.

Anyway, I was wondering what kind of experience everybody else has had with reacting to foods other than gluten. Did you have problems and if so, did those eventually go away as you started avoiding gluten? Did you continue eating those foods or avoid them for a while and then re-introduce them?

Any feedback is greatly appreciated.

Thanks,

Kristina

P.S. So glad to have found this forum! :)

mushroom Proficient

Hi Kristina, and welcome to the forum.

My story is perhaps not typical because I recognized problems with corn and lactose, and then tested sensitive to soy, long before knowing gluten was a problem. I definitely avoided corn and milk and cream and ice cream, and was soy-lite for years before going gluten-free (self-diagnosed, it runs in the family). At that time I was so busy looking for gluten that I really didn't pay attention to whether there was soy in things until I developed a huge, red rash, extreme itchiness, hives, etc., and folks on here suggested soy. Well, of course, I had done a lot of replacement of foods with their gluten-free equivalents and almost all of them contained quite large quantities of soy. So that went out the window. Next came the nightshade family, although I have reintroduced potato and some small quantities of tomato, but definitely no green peppers, and I haven't tried eggplant yet because dh isn't particularly fond. My naturopathic testing showed up not just lactose but casein and also eggs, so gave those two up for three weeks but I got worse, and without my morning yogurt I was a basket case. So I added them back in and felt better again. I don't really believe that I am intolerant of eggs and casein).

I have had two outbreaks of splotchy red itchy rash on my face, one after taking a sublingual B12 (think it might have been the mannitol) and again after taking anthocyanin supplements. Now I have been prescribed Humira for my psoriatic arthritis and find that it contains mannitol, so am trying to track down some pure mannitol to test before I start the injections. It is important to me because before I can take the Humira I have to take an antibiotic called Isoniazid in case I have TB (the course lasts 6 months) because I always test positive on the Mantoux test because I had a BCG immunization as a teenager and they can't rule out that I don't have it. The Humira can give you an extreme case if you do happen to carry it. I am sure that this Isoniazid will play havoc with my GI system (the warnings sthat come with it are pages long) :o and I don't want to take it if I don't have to. In the meantime I am testing my vitamin and mineral levels for deficiencies to try to get those under control and work on my skin problems.

So you see, like so many here, there are multiple sensitivities and some of them can go away after time and some do not. I can eat corn (although I don't do massive quantities) here in NZ because it is not GM. But I think all soy in the western world is GM and I totally avoid it (even the soya lecithin in chocolate which I am doing really hard) and all wheat is so hybridized that even if we could eat it originally we sensitive ones certainly never can again. I can eat organic beef but not regular beef. So I have switched to all organic chicken before I become sensitive to that. And I try not to eat too much of any one thing.

I have been gluten free for 10 months, soy free for 6 months, and green pepper free for approx. 5 mos. (and lactose free for 16 years).

Hope this information is of some help to you. I have no problems with fruit (except the anthocyanin supplements which were pretty concentrated). Haven't tried berries again yet, giving my system a chance to forget about that reaction.

Good luck on your own detective work, because you really do have to take charge yourself and discover what your own particular problems are (and as ShayFL says, use the medical people as your assistants.) And everyone here is always ready to help.

Neroli

Erin Elaine Newbie

Oh, this is fun. Here goes:

By accident, you find out that you have major bone loss. Your doctor does a few tests, all come back normal and then he tells you that the cause of your bone loss is because you are thin. And you are only 27 years old! That was fun.

My other favorite was post diagnosis. My new doctor read my chart and said:

debmidge Rising Star

Your doctor thinks that Celiac is a discontinued model from Toyota

slmprofesseur Apprentice

How about when your doc:

a) implies that problems with gluten are all in your head. (considering you used to come in regularly for issues with asthma, eczema, and constipation....)

B) tells you that celiac is not prevalent in african-americans...so there's no need to test.

or:

when the allergist diagnoses your son and says:

he's allergic to wheat, rye, barley, oats..

You respond: We'll continue to follow a Gluten-free diet.

She says:

He's not allergic to gluten- just wheat, rye, barley and oats...

cmom Contributor

...or when the GI dr tells your oldest son that sinus problems really have nothing to do with celiac disease and when you call for an appt for your youngest son, and the receptionist asks for his symptoms then tells you, "headaches really have nothing to do with celiac disease; he should see another specialist for that." :)

  • 3 weeks later...
Mrs. N Rookie

This is a great thread! I am so glad to read all of your stories. It's so nice to not be alone. I had a different condition that stumped the first couple of doctors that I saw, the first of which I had seen repeatedly for months. I am blessed, though, in that my doctor suggested celiac disease right off the bat. I was the one who told her it couldn't be that and refused to go to a GI doc for about a year. I had just come off dairy and was feeling a lot better and the pain felt gall bladdery anyway. (I've since read that there is a connection between gall bladder disease and celiac disease.) After a year of on again off again pain, and then realizing I was still having diarrhea, just not as often without the dairy, I decided to cooperate with my doctor.

It seems like the other couple of frustrating health issues I've had were more difficult to dx and treat than celiac disease. I don't even know that I have celiac disease for sure, just that de-glutening has made a WORLD of difference.

Thanks for sharing, all. :)

climbmtwhitney Apprentice

Hilarious! :P Thanks for sharing!

#1000. How about when your doctor sits you down and says that "Sometimes we think we have these symptoms. They seem perfectly real to us. But, actually they are all just in our head."

Gotta love that one!

  • 2 weeks later...
angieInCA Apprentice

Your Dr. tells you that you are getting older and therefore probably becoming intollerent to Gluten. So go lactose free and cut back whole grain foods and you should probably take a daily stool softener so that when you don't have diarrhea you won't have to strain. :huh:

Jestgar Rising Star
Hilarious! :P Thanks for sharing!

#1000. How about when your doctor sits you down and says that "Sometimes we think we have these symptoms. They seem perfectly real to us. But, actually they are all just in our head."

Gotta love that one!

:lol: :lol:

"Sometimes we think we were paying attention in Medical School, but it was all in our head."

jerseyangel Proficient
you should probably take a daily stool softener so that when you don't have diarrhea you won't have to strain. :huh:

You gotta be kidding! <_<

That takes the cake :o

angieInCA Apprentice
You gotta be kidding! <_<

That takes the cake :o

I kid you not! My jaw hit the floor. Needless to say I started looking for another Dr. the moment I stepped out of her office.

  • 1 year later...
missladyj Newbie

when they throw medication at a problem that you have tested negative for

and my mom's story (although she doesn't have celiac, she has another autoimmune disease)

her doctor told her she was overweight...my mom kindly told him "you try being on high doses of prednisone for 6 months and see if you lose weight" the nurses got a chuckle out of it and said that they had gained weight after only being on predisone for a couple of days. jerk.

RideAllWays Enthusiast

My "Diagnosis'":

Anxiety

Anorexia

Depression

And after spending most of 5 years on crutches on and off and two months in a wheelchair my grad year for unbearable joint pain and the breaking down of tissue in my ankles and knees, which "Couldn't be fixed and you'll grow out of it" they said I was having Phantom pain i.e. ALL IN MY HEAD.

Then the usual IBS

THEN "It happen's to girls your age" after fainting three times in a week at school, which they then attributed to attention seeking.

FINALLY a friend who had Celiac all her life suggested I get tested. The doc wouldn't do it, saying my symptoms didn't fit. I saw an allergist who put me on a gluten-free diet, felt like a new person after a few weeks, had a biopsy 6 months later which showed residual damage that had been healing, not enough to diagnose.

Is there anything we can do?

O.N. Rookie

You should change your doctor when:

- your physician knows about your family history (depression, suicides) and label you as a "mental" patient when he sends you to GI and hematologist <_< ;

- your GI checks your colon during the colonoscopy and tells you that you are healthy (he didn

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    • suek54
      Thank you all for your advice and the dermatitis herpetiformis article. The latter made me realise I had stopped taking my antihistamine, which I will restart today. The Dapsone has cleared the rash entirely but I still get quite a bit itching, absolutely nothing to see though. I know its notoriously hard to clear and its still relatively early days for me.  The iodine issue is very interesting. I do eat quite a bit of salt because I have Addison's disease and sodium retention is an issue. I also have autoimmune hypothyroidism, not sure how a low iodine diet would play into that? Because of my Addison's I am totally steroid dependent, I take steroids 4 x daily and cannot mount any defence against inflammation. I need to increase my meds for that. Now that I know what is wrong I can do just that if Im having a bad day. Life is very sweet, just so damn complicated sometimes! Hey ho, onwards. Thank you again for your advice.  
    • trents
      So, essentially all of the nutrition in the food we eat is absorbed through the villous lining of the small bowel. This is the section of the intestinal track that is damaged by celiac disease. This villous lining is composed of billions of finger-like projections that create a huge amount of surface area for absorbing nutrients. For the celiac person, when gluten is consumed, it triggers an autoimmune reaction in this area which, of course, generates inflammation. The antibodies connected with this inflammation is what the celiac blood tests are designed to detect but this inflammation, over time, wears down the finger-like projections of the villous lining. Of course, when this proceeds for an extended period of time, greatly reduces the absorption efficiency of the villous lining and often results in many and various nutrient deficiency-related health issues. Classic examples would be osteoporosis and iron deficiency. But there are many more. Low D3 levels is a well-known celiac-caused nutritional deficiency. So is low B12. All the B vitamins in fact. Magnesium, zinc, etc.  Celiac disease can also cause liver inflammation. You mention elevated ALP levels. Elevated liver enzymes over a period of 13 years was what led to my celiac diagnosis. Within three months of going gluten free my liver enzymes normalized. I had elevated AST and ALT. The development of sensitivities to other food proteins is very common in the celiac population. Most common cross reactive foods are dairy and oats but eggs, soy and corn are also relatively common offenders. Lactose intolerance is also common in the celiac population because of damage to the SB lining.  Eggs when they are scrambled or fried give me a gut ache. But when I poach them, they do not. The steam and heat of poaching causes a hydrolysis process that alters the protein in the egg. They don't bother me in baked goods either so I assume the same process is at work. I bought a plastic poacher on Amazon to make poaching very easy. All this to say that many of the issues you describe could be caused by celiac disease. 
    • catnapt
      thank you so much for your detailed and extremely helpful reply!! I can say with absolute certainty that the less gluten containing products I've eaten over the past several years, the better I've felt.   I wasn't avoiding gluten, I was avoiding refined grains (and most processed foods) as well as anything that made me feel bad when I ate it. It's the same reason I gave up dairy and eggs- they make me feel ill.  I do have a bit of a sugar addiction lol so a lot of times I wasn't sure if it was the refined grains that I was eating - or the sugar. So from time to time I might have a cookie or something but I've learned how to make wonderful cookies and golden brownies with BEANS!! and no refined sugar - I use date paste instead. Pizza made me so ill- but I thought it was probably the cheese. I gave up pizza and haven't missed it. the one time I tried a slice I felt so bad I knew I'd never touch it again. I stopped eating wheat pasta at least 3 yrs ago- just didn't feel well after eating it. I tried chick pea pasta and a few others and discovered I like the brown rice pasta. I still don't eat a lot of pasta but it's nice for a change when I want something easy. TBH over the years I've wondered sometimes if I might be gluten intolerant but really believed it was not possible for me to have celiac disease. NOW I need to know for sure- because I'm in the middle of a long process of trying to find out why I have a high parathyroid level (NOT the thyroid- but rather the 4 glands that control the calcium balance in your body) I have had a hard time getting my vit D level up, my serum calcium has run on the low side of normal for many years... and now I am losing calcium from my bones and excreting it in my urine (some sort of renal calcium leak) Also have a high ALP since 2014. And now rapidly worsening bone density.  I still do not have a firm diagnosis. Could be secondary HPT (but secondary to what? we need to know) It could be early primary HPT. I am spilling calcium in my urine but is that caused by the high parathyroid hormone or is it the reason my PTH is high>? there are multiple feedback loops for this condition.    so I will keep eating the bread and some wheat germ that does not seem to bother me too much (it hasn't got enough gluten to use just wheat germ)    but I'm curious- if you don't have a strong reaction to a product- like me and wheat germ- does that mean it's ok to eat or is it still causing harm even if you don't have any obvious symptoms? I guess what you are saying about silent celiac makes it likely that you can have no symptoms and still have the harm... but geez! you'd think they'd come up with a way to test for this that didn't require you to consume something that makes you sick! I worry about the complications I've been reading about- different kinds of cancers etc. also wondering- are there degrees of celiac disease?  is there any correlation between symptoms and the amnt of damage to your intestines? I also need a firm diagnosis because I have an identical twin sister ... so if I have celiac, she has it too- or at least the genetic make up for having it. I did have a VERY major stress to my body in 2014-2016 time frame .. lost 50lbs in a short period of time and had severe symptoms from acute protracted withdrawal off an SSRI drug (that I'd been given an unethically high dose of, by a dr who has since lost his license)  Going off the drug was a good thing and in many ways my health improved dramatically- just losing 50lbs was helpful but I also went  off almost a dozen different medications, totally changed my diet and have been doing pretty well except for the past 3-4 yrs when the symptoms related to the parathyroid issue cropped up. It is likely that I had low vit D for some time and that caused me a lot of symptoms. The endo now tells me that low vit D can be caused by celiac disease so I need to know for sure! thank you for all that great and useful information!!! 
    • trents
      Welcome, @catnapt! The most recent guidelines are the daily consumption of a minimum of 10g of gluten (about the amount found in 4-6 slices of wheat bread) for a minimum of two weeks. But if possible stretching that out even more would enhance the chances of getting valid test results. These guidelines are for those who have been eating gluten free for a significant amount of time. It's called the "gluten challenge".  Yes, you can develop celiac disease at any stage of life. There is a genetic component but also a stress trigger that is needed to activate the celiac genes. About 30-40% of the general population possesses the genetic potential to develop celiac disease but only about 1% of the general population actually develop celiac disease. For most with the potential, the triggering stress event doesn't happen. It can be many things but often it is a viral infection. Having said that, it is also the case that many, many people who eventually are diagnosed with celiac disease probably experienced the actual onset years before. Many celiacs are of the "silent" type, meaning that symptoms are largely missing or very minor and get overlooked until damage to the small bowel lining becomes advanced or they develop iron deficiency anemia or some other medical problem associated with celiac disease. Many, many are never diagnosed or are diagnosed later in life because they did not experience classic symptoms. And many physicians are only looking for classic symptoms. We now know that there are over 200 symptoms/medical problems associated with celiac disease but many docs are only looking for things like boating, gas, diarrhea. I certainly understand your concerns about not wanting to damage your body by taking on a gluten challenge. Your other option is to totally commit to gluten free eating and see if your symptoms improve. It can take two years or more for complete healing of the small bowel lining once going gluten free but usually people experience significant improvement well before then. If their is significant improvement in your symptoms when going seriously gluten free, then you likely have your answer. You would either have celiac disease or NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity).
    • catnapt
      after several years of issues with a para-gland issue, my endo has decided it's a good idea for me to be tested for celiac disease. I am 70 yrs old and stunned to learn that you can get celiac this late in life. I have just gradually stopped eating most foods that contain gluten over the past several years- they just make me feel ill- although I attributed it to other things like bread spiking blood sugar- or to the things I ate *with* the bread or crackers etc   I went to a party in Nov and ate a LOT of a vegan roast made with vital wheat gluten- as well as stuffing, rolls and pie crust... and OMG I was so sick! the pain, the bloating, the gas, the nausea... I didn't think it would ever end (but it did) and I was ready to go the ER but it finally subsided.   I mentioned this to my endo and now she wants me to be tested for celiac after 2 weeks of being on gluten foods. She has kind of flip flopped on how much gluten I should eat, telling me that if the symptoms are severe I can stop. I am eating 2-3 thin slices of bread per day (or english muffins) and wow- it does make me feel awful. But not as bad as when I ate that massive amnt of vital wheat gluten. so I will continue on if I have to... but what bothers me is - if it IS celiac, it seems stupid for lack of a better word, to intentionally cause more damage to my body... but I am also worried, on the other hand, that this is not a long enough challenge to make the blood work results valid.   can you give me any insight into this please?   thank you
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