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

Symptoms Improved After Going On Atkins?


TDMB

Recommended Posts

TDMB Newbie

Hi there,

I think my boyfriend might have Celiac disease. He's had problems since long before I met him and used to have to go to the loo about five times a day, often for quite a while at a time! But he is not thin and anaemic as they describe, in fact he is a bit overweight, hence us deciding to go on Atkins. We've been doing this for two weeks now and the transformation has been amazing. He says he feels completely normal and everything is back to how it should be. But then last night he ate some allegedly 'Atkins friendly' pancakes which we got from a website, but within half an hour he was in the loo and had to keep going back every half hour or so for about four hours. And now today he is fine again. I looked at the packaging and it says they contain 'fiber' but it's American labelling so I'm not sure if that means they contain gluten. I'm guessing they probably do?

So, the question is, do you think he might have celiac disease? It certainly sounds like it to me. All thoughts welcome!

Many thanks.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kbtoyssni Contributor

It sounds like you might have a diagnosis based on dietary response! Why don't you try going completely gluten-free for a while and see how it goes? It's also very common for celiacs to be overweight - being underweight is an outdated medical misconception. I think it's something like 40% of all celiacs are overweight pre-diagnosis. The good news is that if celiac is what's keeping him from losing weight, going gluten-free could help that.

Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

"Atkins-friendly" does not mean gluten-free. If gluten is causing his reactions (sure sounds like it from your post), then Atkins-friendly is not going to be a help. It might be low-carb, but if it contains gluten (look for ingredients like wheat, flour, wheat starch, wheat bran,barley, malt, malted barley, rye, even oat bran), then it will probably make him sick.

The ingredients usually list the source of fiber, and I'm betting that it was wheat.

Hope you guys find answers soon!

HouseKat Apprentice
Hi there,

I think my boyfriend might have Celiac disease. He's had problems since long before I met him and used to have to go to the loo about five times a day, often for quite a while at a time! But he is not thin and anaemic as they describe, in fact he is a bit overweight, hence us deciding to go on Atkins. We've been doing this for two weeks now and the transformation has been amazing. He says he feels completely normal and everything is back to how it should be. But then last night he ate some allegedly 'Atkins friendly' pancakes which we got from a website, but within half an hour he was in the loo and had to keep going back every half hour or so for about four hours. And now today he is fine again. I looked at the packaging and it says they contain 'fiber' but it's American labelling so I'm not sure if that means they contain gluten. I'm guessing they probably do?

So, the question is, do you think he might have celiac disease? It certainly sounds like it to me. All thoughts welcome!

Many thanks.

TDMB,

I also saw a big improvement in my health when I was on Atkins a few years ago, which led me to ask my then PCP about Celiac disease, but he dismissed it because I was overweight. (I've been asking doctors about Celiac since I first read about it over 15 years ago as part of my neverending quest to figure out WTF is wrong with my body.) If I had seen 100% improvement while I was on Atkins maybe I would have been able to make myself stay on the diet, but some Atkins okay foods contain gluten, so I would still have bouts of diarrhea. After a while, I went back to my regular carb and gluten filled diet to suffer for, oh, another five years...

I think that your boyfriend should get tested ASAP.

Kate

NorthernElf Enthusiast

I remember reading somewhere on the 'net - in all the celiac/gluten-free stuff I've read - that the Atkin's diet was responsible for leading to quite a few celiac diagnoses. People had tried the diet and felt better - things like the big D had improved - and it led them to look harder at their diet and, with docs, realize gluten was a problem. No, the Atkins diet is not gluten-free but whole meals and even days of eating can incidentally be gluten-free...definitely less gluten than the typical diet anyway.

It also shed some light on the celiac stereotype - all celiacs aren't thin & wasting away or even have the big D as a symptom as thin folks wouldn't be on the diet to begin with.

Nancym Enthusiast

I actually got worse when going on a low carb diet because I was buying the low carb products like bread that are filled with wheat gluten. Gluten is protein and thus low carb!

If you guys need any support on your diet there's a great low carb message forum at Open Original Shared Link

BTW: Lots of us over there figured out we are gluten intolerant. Lots of recipes and suggestions on how to succeed.

  • 2 weeks later...
tuxedocat Apprentice

My improved well being on Atkins should've certainly been a sign of something wrong... I was on Atkins for a year and a half and did very well. I discovered "brain fog" feelings were gone. I only started to have real GI (gastrointestinal) issues when I went OFF Atkins after being on for a year and a half. I never connected the GI with the gluten until I got DH and the doctor suggested it. He did not think celiac though... I'm still in the process of diagnosis... but the doctors say I'm gluten intolerant and if it quacks like a duck...


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Offthegrid Explorer

Atkins in a way sounds a lot like the specific carbohydrate diet. I plan to try this soon as I am still having symptoms after eliminating a whole host of food groups.

Johnny Cool Rookie

"Strict" Adkins', as in the beginning two weeks, by it's very definition is gluten free. No alcohol, no bread, pasta, rice, potatoes, sugar, milk, all you get is meat, eggs, cream, and very little vegetables. After inception, you get to add in vegetables and fruit, but still no starchy foods like bread, etc. If someone is on Adkins' and is eating bread, even "low-carb" they're just fooling themselves.

My husband, this is actually his user name, etc. has been told by two specialists now that he most likely has Celiac, he has his biopsy tomorrow. When they told us about what his diet was going to be, my thought was, "that doesn't sound so bad, it's still less strict than Adkins'" which I had been on since 1999. As I've "fallen off" the Adkins wagon in recent years, now will be a good time for me to climb back on!! We toasted each other with our last piece of rye toast this morning! I haven't totally relaxed from Adkins', I still don't eat sugar or "white" food (white/whole wheat bread, pasta, white rice, potatoes) due to my blood sugar issues, but I'm going to give up rye bread, as he will. Maybe I'LL try gluten free too, maybe I have a gluten intolerance and am not necessarily pre-diabetic as I've always thought! And if I lose weight, that would be great!! :)

arc Newbie

Soy sauce is another source of gluten for low carbers. We used it quite a bit for marinades.

  • 6 months later...
geokozmo Rookie

So, the question is, do you think he might have celiac disease? It certainly sounds like it to me. All thoughts welcome!

Many thanks.

ksymonds84 Enthusiast
My improved well being on Atkins should've certainly been a sign of something wrong... I was on Atkins for a year and a half and did very well. I discovered "brain fog" feelings were gone. I only started to have real GI (gastrointestinal) issues when I went OFF Atkins after being on for a year and a half. I never connected the GI with the gluten until I got DH and the doctor suggested it. He did not think celiac though... I'm still in the process of diagnosis... but the doctors say I'm gluten intolerant and if it quacks like a duck...

This was how is was for me too. I got diagnosed with IBS in my late teens and thought that the strict low carb diet I was on cured the IBS. Now I know it actually cured glutened intolerance. As soon as I went off the diet my symptoms came back which is why I stayed gluten light for years and my blood tests came back negative for celiac. My doctor does agree that I am gluten intolerant so just call me ducky :P

ksymonds84 Enthusiast
My improved well being on Atkins should've certainly been a sign of something wrong... I was on Atkins for a year and a half and did very well. I discovered "brain fog" feelings were gone. I only started to have real GI (gastrointestinal) issues when I went OFF Atkins after being on for a year and a half. I never connected the GI with the gluten until I got DH and the doctor suggested it. He did not think celiac though... I'm still in the process of diagnosis... but the doctors say I'm gluten intolerant and if it quacks like a duck...

This was how is was for me too. I got diagnosed with IBS in my late teens and thought that the strict low carb diet I was on cured the IBS. Now I know it actually cured glutened intolerance. As soon as I went off the diet my symptoms came back which is why I stayed gluten light for years and my blood tests came back negative for celiac. My doctor does agree that I am gluten intolerant so just call me ducky :P

Leslie-FL Rookie

Yep, I was on the Atkins Diet back in 2003 and part of 2004, and I felt better than I had since I was a kid. UNTIL I discovered low carb bread. Once I started feeling bad again (I had more fatigue, brain fog, confusion and depression than IBS symptoms, but there was that, too) I finally "knew", after suspecting for years, that I either had a problem with wheat or yeast. I did some experimenting with avoiding certain foods, but at that point I still didn't know about the barley, rye, and oat connection, or some of the other names of gluten ingredients, so I was still consuming gluten and still feeling bad.

Then in the fall of 2005, I tried a diet that was very strict and was designed for very slow metabolisms. It allowed no bread, no crackers, no milk or cheese, no nuts - basically it was very lean meats, lower-sugar fruits, lower-carb vegetables, rice, and potatoes. And it did allow oatmeal. Again, I felt better than I had since childhood. I didn't stay on that diet, though, because it required eating six small meals a day and I wasn't quite disciplined enough, at that point, to do it right.

By the spring of 2007, I had finally found the rest of the puzzle because of an article I read in a magazine, and some Internet research. The article was entitled something like, "The Food Ingredient That May Be Making You Fat". If I had been under the misconception that all Celiacs were thin, I may have missed learning what I needed to learn. And after going gluten free, I dropped the first 10 pounds without even trying.

I'm learning to be more disciplined now, as far as eating for weight loss. Eating gluten free, though, has become really easy, because of the fear of feeling bad again if I don't.

  • 1 month later...
samcarter Contributor

I read (I think it was in Shauna James Ahern's book, Gluten Free Girl) a theory about the popularity of the low-carb diets. People go on it, and feel so much better--more energy, more mental clarity--because they are ingesting no or very little gluten (at least in the induction or beginning phase). Even the early "weight loss" in the induction phase could be attributed to losing the bloat (water retention common to celiacs), or just losing the gas trapped in the belly.

I tried the South Beach Diet years ago, and felt amazing the first couple of weeks. But the diet is so restrictive--even more so than a gluten free diet, I felt--that it's hard to stay on. On a gluten free diet you can have all manner of fruits, vegetables, potatoes, et cetera. The lower carb diets restrict those.

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. - asaT replied to Scott Adams's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      48

      Supplements for those Diagnosed with Celiac Disease

    2. - asaT replied to Scott Adams's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      48

      Supplements for those Diagnosed with Celiac Disease

    3. - nanny marley replied to hjayne19's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      20

      Insomnia help

    4. - David Blake commented on Scott Adams's article in Product Labeling Regulations
      1

      FDA Moves to Improve Gluten Labeling—What It Means for People With Celiac Disease

    5. - nanny marley replied to wellthatsfun's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      4

      nothing has changed

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

    • Total Members
      133,343
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    emoryprose
    Newest Member
    emoryprose
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • asaT
      plant sources of calcium, such as spinach, have calcium bound to oxalates, which is not good. best source of calcium is unfortunately dairy, do you tolerate dairy? fermented dairy like kefir is good and or a little hard cheese. i do eat dairy, i can only take so much dietary restriction and gluten is hard enough! but i guess some people do have bad reactions to it, so different for everyone.  
    • asaT
      i take b12, folate, b2, b6, glycine, Nac, zinc, vk2 mk4, magnesium, coq10, pqq, tmg, creatine, omega 3, molybdnem (sp) and just started vit d. quite a list i know.  I have high homocysteine (last checked it was 19, but is always high and i finally decided to do something about it) and very low vitamin d, 10. have been opposed to this supp in the past, but going to try it at 5k units a day. having a pth test on friday, which is suspect will be high. my homocysteine has come down to around 9 with 3 weeks of these supplements and expect it to go down further. i also started on estrogen/progesterone. I have osteoporosis too, so that is why the hormones.  anyway, i think all celiacs should have homocysteine checked and treated if needed (easy enough with b vit, tmg). homocysteine very bad thing to be high for a whole host of reasons. all the bad ones, heart attack , stroke, alzi, cancer..... one of the most annoying things about celiacs (and there are so many!) is the weight gain. i guess i stayed thin all those years being undiagnosed because i was under absorbing everything including calories. going gluten-free and the weight gain has been terrible, 30#, but i'm sure a lot more went into that (hip replacement - and years of hip pain leading to inactivity when i was previously very active, probably all related to celiacs, menopause) yada yada. i seemed to lose appetite control, like there was low glp, or leptin or whatever all those hormones are that tell you that you are full and to stop eating. my appetite is immense and i'm never full. i guess decades or more ( i think i have had celiacs since at least my teens - was hospitalized for abdominal pain and diarrhea for which spastic colon was eventually diagnosed and had many episodes of diarrhea/abdominal pain through my 20's. but that symptom seemed to go away and i related it to dairy much more so than gluten. Also my growth was stunted, i'm the only shorty in my family. anyway, decades of malabsorption and maldigestion led to constant hunger, at least thats my theory. then when i started absorbing normally, wham!! FAT!!!    
    • nanny marley
      Great advise there I agree with the aniexty part, and the aura migraine has I suffer both, I've also read some great books that have helped I'm going too look the one you mentioned up too thankyou for that, I find a camomile tea just a small one and a gentle wind down before bed has helped me too, I suffer from restless leg syndrome and nerve pain hence I don't always sleep well at the best of times , racing mind catches up I have decorated my whole house in one night in my mind before 🤣 diet changes mindset really help , although I have to say it never just disappears, I find once I came to terms with who I am I managed a lot better  , a misconception is for many to change , that means to heal but that's not always the case , understanding and finding your coping mechanisms are vital tools , it's more productive to find that because there is no failure then no pressure to become something else , it's ok to be sad it's ok to not sleep , it's ok to worry , just try to see it has a journey not a task 🤗
    • nanny marley
      I agree there I've tryed this myself to prove I can't eat gluten or lactose and it sets me back for about a month till I have to go back to being very strict to settle again 
    • trents
      You may also need to supplement with B12 as this vitamin is also involved in iron assimilation and is often deficient in long-term undiagnosed celiac disease.
×
×
  • 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.