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What Were Your First Symptoms


Guest jhmom

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Guest jhmom

I thought this would be an interesting topic.

For me I woke up one morning sick as a dog, with nausea, diarrhea and abdominal pain. It literally hit me overnight :unsure:


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Carriefaith Enthusiast

It was a year ago when I finally realized that there was something seriously wrong with me. I couldn't keep anything in my system for about 3 or 4 days. Everything instantly came out. I thought I might be getting dehydrated or something. It was on a weeked so I went to outpatients and got referred to my GI specialist. Four months later I had got diagnosed with celiac.

celiac3270 Collaborator

I used to throw up every night after dinner when I was in first grade. It would build up: I would eat, start to feel sick, throw up, then be fine. It happened nearly every night.

I started getting 12-24 hour bouts with abdominal pains, cramping, and vomiting in fifth grade. I got them consistently throughout fifth and seventh grades, which is when I seriously asked a doctor about this and got diagnosed.

darlindeb25 Collaborator
;) this will be interesting to read the posts in here, but for me--i dont even know where to begin--i was sick for so long that i cant even remember what happened first :( i did have a very stressful year 23 yrs ago when my sister lost her first baby and i was pregnant with my 4th and feeling guilty---stress can be a very strong trigger for us--i think that may have pushed me over the edge, but i think i had been sick for a long time before that :( my sister was a celiac that craved dirt as a child--so i am thinking this started when we were kids :angry: took the doctors way to long to figure us out--i will be watching for all of your stories-- ;) deb
tarnalberry Community Regular

It was nothing big enough that I realized it in particular. It was a suggestion of someone else and a connection of bloating, hemmhroids and being tired.

Guest jhmom
my sister was a celiac that craved dirt as a child--

My daughter loved to eat sand when she was little....hmmmmmmm........ very interesting.

Also for my 9 year old daughter...... she always complained of tummy aches and would double over in pain everytime after eating.

Samy Newbie

For me, apparently it was headaches. I'd suffered through chronic headaches for 4 years before any kind of stomach problems began. I had every test imaginable and no one could find a cause for the headaches. I also had vertigo, tingling/numbness in my left arm and leg, everything was on my left side-even the headaches. My symptoms were so bad my doctor was afraid I was heading towards a stroke and I was still a teen when it started.

I have problems with my eyes, my left eye especially (I'm legally blind in my left eye), so we just figured the headaches have something to do with my eye. I still think my eye is involved, at least to a certain degree, especially since I still get the headaches. Though they are not as frequent since I was diagnosed with celiac disease.

Anyway, I began to get stomach aches after I ate. By this past June I was having stomach aches, cramping, bloating, constipation/diarrhea, nausea so bad I didn't want to eat anything. At first I thought it was my lactose intolerance acting up until it didn't stop. I called my doctor in July and he immediately told me to try cutting out gluten and got me tested and he was right.

Samantha


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Racheleona Apprentice

at the very beginning I started getting grey hair at 15, and started losing my hair. Then I started rapidly gaining weight, having very low energy. Then I intentionally started to lose weight, and when I stopped I continually was losing weight even though I started realizing I was losing to much weight and began eating quiet a bit. Then I stopped menstruating, and have had headaches, and joint pain, and continual very low energy and mental fog, and I am only 19! Hopefully being gluten-free will change all these soon.

Rachel

Nadtorious Rookie

I started getting DH sores on my hands and face when I was 16. Then, my senior year of high school, I started to get really bad tummyaches and was vomitting blood and losing a lot of weight. I stopped getting my period and lost about 40 pounds. Finally, 3 years and 6 doctors later, one finally took one look at my chart (after I had passed out at work from total dehydration and got sent to the ER by our staff nutritionist) and asked if I had ever been tested for Celiac Disease. The rest is history....... ;)

sashabetty Explorer

My daughter was about 13 months old when she had the runs for 2 weeks, followed by 2-3 months of smelly unformed stool, lethargy, weight loss, crankiness, bloating. Testing provided no conclusions so no official diagnosis and only going gluten-free made her health improve and her symptoms abate.

stargirl Apprentice

I was 16 and went to LA on a mission trip during the summer and came down with Strep Throat. I went undiagnosed and sick for a week. (Becoming dehydrated, splitting headaches, exhaustion, nausea, lack of appetite) I came home and was tested for Mono, Strep, and Scarlet Fever. Wad diagnosed and started to recover. I then went to summer camp as a counselor and couldn't keep anything down for a week. I literally ate nothing and still had major diaherra. MISERABLE I came home and spent two days throwing up. After that I simply couldn't seem to get totally better, always getting stomach aches, and overall never being healthy. I went totally gluten free in January. I'm not sure if I triggered Celiac there or if I had all my childhood when I would have "phantom stomach aches," which were declared physcological and an attempt for attention. It was either when I was nine or 15.

ashlee's mom Rookie

Looking back, we could see quite a few signs our dd showed that we had missed. Then she got diarrhea that didn't go away. She lost weight and got incredibly lethargic. She was diagnosed a little over a month from when the constant diarrhea started. She never ate dirt, but she did like to lick paper. I would catch her hiding behind something licking the pages in her books, or even occasionally photos. I got her to stop the photos since there were chemicals on them, but I don't know if she ever stopped the paper until she went gluten-free.

dbuhl79 Contributor

In regards to the children that licked paper, ate dirt or sand, has anyone had an explaination from their doctor ?

My only thought on this is that I know animals will eat things out of the ordinary when their bodies are not getting the proper nutrients. Could something in children be signaling this too?

Just a thought to ponder..

sashabetty Explorer
In regards to the children that licked paper, ate dirt or sand, has anyone had an explaination from their doctor ?

Cravings such as these are known as pica, and indicates a deficiency, if I remember right, of either Zinc or Iron. I used to eat match heads when I was very young.

Makes sense with Celiac causing absorption isuues and deficiencies that some people would experience this.

kabowman Explorer

I knew I had a problem with food but refused to see it for what it was for years. However, looking back, my symptoms actually showed up about 5-7 years before I had serious, unavoidable symptoms. Now, I realize that all the pain and symptoms have been going on MUCH longer than I originally thought--more than 13 years, it just got to the point where I couldn't ingore them any more.

-Kate

Guest jhmom

I too ate the ends off matches, when I tell people that they think I am crazy!!!!! :blink:

Thomas Apprentice

I'm not really sure what is connected with celiac and what isn't.

LynnR Explorer

For me it really got going a little over 7 years ago upon coming back from China after adopting our daughter. I got very tired, cold all the time, & went down to 68 pounds. Ultimately, I was diagnosed as Anorexia.

SteveW Rookie

My symptoms progressed in a slow sneaky manor.

Early 20s-Food intolerances that would come and go.

- Driking beer would stuff me up and make my heart race.

- Nothing too bad

25 to 28- Same as above along with constant fatigue and colds/flu every other week.

28-32

dbuhl79 Contributor

Mine started kind of out of nowhere. Thought I had eaten some bad meat, or had a touch of the stomach flu. Wound up in the bathroom a lot. And 3 months later, I'm still in the bathroom a lot. Lost weight, which is nearly impossible for me to do w/o exercising excessively.

Becoming afraid to eat anything, since it all tends to hurt, or result in an urgent need to find a restroom.

Still awaiting test results, and on the verge of a break down. Gone gluten-free as of yesterday officially, I dont care if I ever am officially diagnosed, just get rid of the pain!

ashlee's mom Rookie

Match heads, I had never heard that one. I had heard about Pica, but I always thought it was wanting to eat dirt or clay. Once Ashlee was diagnosed I made the link to the paper, I think it had to be connected. I figure I will know a bit more about when this all started when she eventually evens out on the growth curve. If she gets back to the 50th percentile like when she was a baby, I know things were affecting her growth even before she was 2. We really noticed the slowed growth when she was 3 though.

jools Newbie

I like this topic as well. It seemed to have crept up on me slowly for a period of a few years. I have always had a sensitive tummy, but in my early to mid twenties I began having constant diarrhea. I went to a GI specialist and he diagnosed me with IBS, he said that it wasn't a big deal and that a lot of girls my age had it. He put me on a mild diet and I just thought that this was something I just had to "deal with", not even being aware of the existence of Celiac.

Then, during my late twenties, in fact just this summer, I started to get an itchy rash on my face. I started to monitor my diet and soon came to realize that it was wheat that was triggering the rash. I met a Celiac, we discussed my symptoms are learned of the Gluten Free diet. I went on the diet, my symptoms had improved durastically, until very recently. It seems that I cannot help but to avoid the occasional accidental encounter.

Anyway, I was wondering, is this normal that these symptoms have taken so long to appear? Do many others have increasing symptoms as time goes on? (ie: the sudden appearance of DH?)

Thanks guys,

Jools

plantime Contributor

Looking back, my first symptom was constipation. Then I would get anemic. I never did get any of the classic symptoms. I found out about celiac when I was researching causes for my mom's death. Her colon had ruptured in three places, and I wanted to know why. Her docs said it was allergies, stress, and smoking. When I looked into intestinal problems, I found celiac. She had about half of the symptoms. Then Woman's Day published that article, and I had many of the atypical symptoms. I tried a glutenfree diet, showed improvement, and my doctor said I was sensitive to gluten. When I had gall bladder problems in September, my doc thought it was ulcers, so he ordered an endoscopy. The GI doc that did the endo found red sections, and did biopsies. celiac disease was found, which surprised the gall bladder doc (but not me), and no ulcers were there. Now that I know that I HAVE to be gluten-free for life, it is easier for me to deal with. My older sister has many of the symptoms that I had, so now she is looking into going glutenfree.

llj012564 Newbie

I was sick for years. My Dr went from one thing to another she tested me for everything, Chrons, Ulcers, Cancer, RA , and the list went on , finally she thought it was my gallbladder when that was neg and I started losing 5 pounds a week and couldnt eat anymore because everything made me so sick she ran the blood test for Celiacs. I should say that at this point I was told by another Dr that I had severe IBS with diarrhea and should take some new medication that had life threating side effects :o That was back in Feb04 the diet has been helpful, almost completely painfree most days but still very tired most days <_< At least I dont feel like I have the flu anymore. Thats what I used to tell people It was like having the flu everyday for months. Now if I could just find a legal energy pill I would be good ;)

carriekate Rookie

I never had bowl problems. I started getting cramps and aches in my feet and lower legs, couldn't sleep at night and I felt so tired. Then, when I walked up a flight of stairs my heart would go bang, bang, bang. Lastly, I could not walk very far without stopping because I could not get a full breath (thought it was asthma). Also, starting eating pretzels morning, noon, and night, was obsessed with them, even carried them in a baggie so I could munch on them in the car.

After many doctors and tests, and an iron fusion, I was diagnosed by a hemo dr in August, 2004. I felt better one week into the gluten-free diet but the doctor said immediate relief was from the iron fusion.

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    • Scott Adams
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