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My Ophthalmologist Made Me Cry Today!


tbradley93

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tbradley93 Apprentice

So, I go to the Ophthalmologist today b/c even after 4mo gluten free I'm realizing that I'm REALLY gluten sensitive and it has been affecting my eye (its very embarrassing in public). Anyways, I


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taweavmo3 Enthusiast

Ugh, sorry you had to go through that! I'd bet that if we took a poll, almost all of us have had at least one doc make us cry, lol! I know I sure have....twice actually. I went to a doctor years ago for my headaches. I started explaining my symptoms, and he got really angry with me and told me to slow down, I was giving him too much information. I couldn't help it, I started crying. I was crying b/c the jackass yelled at me, but he took this to mean that I was crying over something else. He started drilling me about how my husband treated me, was I abused, etc. This was the first time I had seen this guy! It was so bizarre. I never did get anything for my headaches, lol. I couldn't get out of that office fast enough....he was an odd man, and I really should have filed a complaint for the way he treated me.

Second time was our pediatrician, he kept blowing off my concerns about dd's developmental delay. I finally pressed him on it, he got frustrated and told me I'd be wasting my time and money going to a specialist to have her evaluated and told me to wait it out. I held in my tears until I checked out, but then it all came out!!!!! I did get her evaled, and it turned out she was nearly two years behind. Jerk.

I know there are good doctors out there, but just like everything else, there are alot of rotten eggs too. I hope you find a new doctor, this guy sounds like a major a$$!

ravenwoodglass Mentor
So, I go to the Ophthalmologist today b/c even after 4mo gluten free I'm realizing that I'm REALLY gluten sensitive and it has been affecting my eye (its very embarrassing in public). Anyways, I
taweavmo3 Enthusiast

I forgot to mention.......I get eye twitches with accidental glutenings. It can really be bothersome, and very annoying. It usually happens with small contaminations, not enough to cause major abdominal distress, but still a definate sign that something snuck in. And it lasts for days. Hope you find some help, good luck to you!

lizard00 Enthusiast

I have that stupid eye twitch!!!! It's only on my left eye, and it's been around all my life on and off, but more so recently. It seems like the past month I've been dealing with it. My mom says its from fatigue, but it seems that after a month, it would clear up.

So a B complex? B12 specifically? How long does it usually take to stop?

I do notice it with gluten also. I had dinner at a friends house this weekend, and it started twitching Sat sometime. I just never thought the two were related... learn something new everyday! :)

babinsky Apprentice

Can't believe I came across this thread...I have spent the last couple of weeks going to Docs becaus both of my eyes were twitching.....The Dr's know I am a confirmed Celiac but none thought the twitching had anything to do with it. They finally gave me Botox injections yesterday to see if it would stop. Hope this doesn't make things worse!

loco-ladi Contributor

Well Son of a ***** add me to the twitching list, drives me nuts when at work or watching TV.... off to locate gluten-free B vitamins......


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pattij Newbie

I don't have any advice for you, but I'm sending you *hugs*.

YoloGx Rookie

Oh wow. Doctors. I really have had bad luck with them too. It seems like many of them want you to be passive and adoring or some such which I never managed to do. Celiac seems to be against the "religion" of many doctors it appears. They think its all old wives tales... They also get into the competion or superiority thing which I beleive misses the point that hey doc, we are here because we need help to heal--let's do this together. Yeah--I have my horror stories too...Now I just try to take what I can learn from them and regard the rest as philosophically as I can.

The eye thing meanwhile is such a bear with celiac. Its the nervous system not being fed properly due to malabsorption. It really is important to take plenty of minerals (including sea minerals and kelp as well as calcium etc.) plus the b vitamins. As I have said elsewhere for me the co-enzyme b vitamins are much more absorbable.

And yeah, I had some twitching and shaking too just before I finally on my own figured out I had celiac from the Merck Manual 15 years ago. A doctor though I had Leaky Gut but I figured that wasn't it. I tried no gluten out and finally got harder teeth and nails. I figured I was onto something despite my doctors not helping out at all. I told Kaiser but they didn't seem interested even when I wasn't healing later on from a car accident.

Unfortunatly the old Merck didn't list all the info so I continued to get exposed to hidden gluten.

The no gluten at all I am finidng is essential. This new awareness about hidden gluten from cutting boards etc. is really helping a lot. My aching joints don't lie! Ditto with my so sensitive eyes. I am thinking as I said elsewhere that for people like us gluten is similar to Superman's kryptonite!

In addition, my eyes have actually improved as a result of the co-enzyme b vitamins (I now wear glasses that are 20 years old!--they are better than a 3 year old prescription!!), not to mention that my hair has gotten wavy etc. whereas before it was always perfectly thin and straight. I say this having avoided most sources of gluten for years and only taking the co-enzyme b vitamins for the last year and a half. This last year and a half I also stopped getting colds and flue etc.

Yolo

GFinDC Veteran

Oh frig!!*$%! Geez, I never put that together until now. I have had eye twitches around my right eye for years. I always figured I must be nervous or something. Never even thought of it being associated with celiac. Course I wasn't aware of celiac until recently anyway. H.E. double tooth picks, I thot I had bad nerves or something, maybe I was right, but due to celiac malabsorbtion!

Well, they seem to be gone at the moment. I have been taking sublingual B-complex by Spring Valley. Given to me by my most excellent sister Pam, who also figured out I was probably celiac. I also take a Solgar B-50 complex. Maybe your twitches will go away with supplements and gluten-free also.

lizard00 Enthusiast

I've been taking a b supplement since i read this post, and wouldn't you know! Today, for the first day in who knows how long, NO EYE TWITCHING!!!!

YoloGx Rookie
I've been taking a b supplement since i read this post, and wouldn't you know! Today, for the first day in who knows how long, NO EYE TWITCHING!!!!

Hi Lizard and All,

I am so glad you guys are trying the co-enzyme B vitamins and discovering they are helping against the twitches!

When I started taking theco-enzyme B's I felt like a revolution was taking place inside me--and it was!! B vitamins are essential for all kinds of things (especially the nervous system!) and we with celiac have trouble making use of them.

My heart used to race for years even though I had low blood pressure cholesterol and the rest and was on a basic no gluten diet. But now with the Co-enzymes B's (in contrast to the regular B complex) my heart doesn't race any longer! Plus I sleep better, don't have twitching aching legs and feet very often (like I used to constantly), and now no longer get colds or flu which I also used to get constantly. With it I also have gotten rid of my headaches 99% of the time.

Yolo

pixiegirl Enthusiast

It took me a while but I finally found myself a good doctor that seems to understand Celiac. However my daughters pediatrician doesn't really get it. Based on my Celiac he ordered a test for her and it came back "mildly positive" and he told us that mildly positive doesn't really mean positive. Well in my book it does!

He also said, oh wow you don't want to have this, its so hard, wow its so hard almost no one can do it. Well that sets us up for failure. My daughter has a life threatening peanut allergy so she is very upset at now having to avoid gluten too. So when she cheats she says... "Mom even my doctor said no one can really do this".

It makes me so angry and I told him, hey I've been doing it for 4 years and I don't find it hard at all, its second nature. I do know from reading this list a lot of people DO find it hard and do cheat occasionally or even dream about gluten foods. I never did, sure it took a while to figure where the gluten was hiding but I don't feel gypped at all.

My 2 cents!

Susan

darlindeb25 Collaborator

When people say it's too hard, it's because they just aren;t quite ready to totally commit yet and in time, they will. It's a process some of us go through, at least, in my opinion. I never did, from the beginning, I went gluten-free and never looked back. I was so sick of being sick, I was willing to give up anything to feel better! Yet, that is my type of personality. 7 1/2 yrs, and I still miss stroganoff, but I wouldn't touch it for a million bucks.

I work for a optometrist, he knows I am a celiac and he still refuses to believe that any problem with my eyes can be related to the celiac disease. I have continual problems with dry eye, he is adamant that it is hormonal or an allergic reaction, but he absolutely will not admit it is autoimmune. Just once, I asked him about vitamins and he told me that "everyone" can get all the vitamins they need from the foods they eat, to which I did reply, "most celiac's cannot get all of their vitamin requirements from food and most celiac's do need to take additional B vitamins, especially B12!"--he just glared at me! I now realize I know a lot more about vitamins than he does. His wife was even tested for celiac disease at one time, and was found to be dairy intolerant, you would think he would understand.

Doctors, as a rule, do not understand vitamins and minerals, therefore, they also do not understand what happens when we lack certain ones. Thankfully, we have the internet so we can figure it out for ourselves!

lizard00 Enthusiast
It took me a while but I finally found myself a good doctor that seems to understand Celiac. However my daughters pediatrician doesn't really get it. Based on my Celiac he ordered a test for her and it came back "mildly positive" and he told us that mildly positive doesn't really mean positive. Well in my book it does!

Did you ask him if that was anything like being mildly pregnant?

:) LOL

Sorry to hear that he set her up for failure. And MDs wonder why so many people doubt them...

YoloGx Rookie
I have that stupid eye twitch!!!! It's only on my left eye, and it's been around all my life on and off, but more so recently. It seems like the past month I've been dealing with it. My mom says its from fatigue, but it seems that after a month, it would clear up.

So a B complex? B12 specifically? How long does it usually take to stop?

I do notice it with gluten also. I had dinner at a friends house this weekend, and it started twitching Sat sometime. I just never thought the two were related... learn something new everyday! :)

Hi Lizard and All,

Just was looking at this thread again--and whereas for some its the B-12 that's needed --for me and my mom its B-1! without which one gets Beri Beri like symptoms and all the rest (legs, feet burning, heart palpitations, nervous problems, glaucoma etc.). I wonder how many other celiacs have this? They don't even do B-1 injections. And I think they rarely test for this. I just got lucky finally after years of mysterious symptoms. Fortunately they have the Country LIfe Co-enzyme B vitamin complex for a relatively cheap price. I have trouble with the sublinguals due to the sorbitol.

I also am becoming aware how I need to really move physically and be mentally engaged or I otherwise easily fall into a depression. I am convinced this is part of the celiac (with my degraded nervous system its all too easy--the myelin sheath was down to 50%--no doubt better now but still being rebuilt) as well as the old hunter gatherer genes. Hey, we were built to survive without much civilization to support us! And I really did feel pretty good living semi-primitively years ago in the woods whereas my then boyfriend fell apart.

Am remembering too how many of my mysterious joint pains and illnesses came as a result of eating or otherwise being exposed to gluten over the years. Sometimes I think of what in a just world would be needless wasted time and illness etc. with all this--however I try to look at it instead as a journey of self discovery which also gives me more understanding and compassion of the suffering of others.

Yolo

bakingbarb Enthusiast

OMG I used to get the eye twitches so badly, I thought it was stress from my then spouse! I never ever have them now though lol.

Ok I need to know what are you all talking about when you are referring to the eyes? My daughter wears contacts and at first it was fine but now she cannot even put them in, her eyes get red and goopy and such. I tried to get her tested for the wheat but that dr just told me everything came back just fine. Oh yeah like I believe that, she is so anemic it isn't funny so I know they were not going to get the wheat correct.

So is it somehow related, the contacts and the eyes? I have a new Dr for her and am going to try to get some answers we also are going to the ophthalmologist but he is real stiff so no way will I bring this up to him.

Kit Newbie
It took me a while but I finally found myself a good doctor that seems to understand Celiac. However my daughters pediatrician doesn't really get it. Based on my Celiac he ordered a test for her and it came back "mildly positive" and he told us that mildly positive doesn't really mean positive. Well in my book it does!

He also said, oh wow you don't want to have this, its so hard, wow its so hard almost no one can do it. Well that sets us up for failure. My daughter has a life threatening peanut allergy so she is very upset at now having to avoid gluten too. So when she cheats she says... "Mom even my doctor said no one can really do this".

It makes me so angry and I told him, hey I've been doing it for 4 years and I don't find it hard at all, its second nature. I do know from reading this list a lot of people DO find it hard and do cheat occasionally or even dream about gluten foods. I never did, sure it took a while to figure where the gluten was hiding but I don't feel gypped at all.

My 2 cents!

Susan

Kit Newbie

At the NIH conference on celiac disease in Wash DC, I heard that a doctor's pessimism about the ability of a celiac patient is a highly reliable indicator of how well the patient will adhere to a gluten-free diet.

First Do No Harm! I guess he forgot that part of the oath.

Kit

YoloGx Rookie
At the NIH conference on celiac disease in Wash DC, I heard that a doctor's pessimism about the ability of a celiac patient is a highly reliable indicator of how well the patient will adhere to a gluten-free diet.

First Do No Harm! I guess he forgot that part of the oath.

Kit

Hi Kit,

Yes overall for some reason they aren't so interested in patients who want to help themselves with diet of all things. Like its the hardest thing in the world. It really is weird I think. No money in it I guess is what they figure. They can't push pills or do emergency procedures. Soemwho they want to be the expert or something and with this it doesn't fly since most of them weren't taught much about nutrition.

Its also part of the old wives tales I think and overtures of the 19th cenetury with Rickets and Quack herbal cures etc. which they learned to debunk in med school. It seems like it goes against the grain to think some of that old stuff actually applies and/or helps.

Yolo

happygirl Collaborator
At the NIH conference on celiac disease in Wash DC, I heard that a doctor's pessimism about the ability of a celiac patient is a highly reliable indicator of how well the patient will adhere to a gluten-free diet.

First Do No Harm! I guess he forgot that part of the oath.

Kit

Kit, Thanks for sharing this info! What conference was this and when? Thanks sharing about the study.

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    • marion wheaton
      Thanks for responding. I researched further and Lindt Lindor chocolate balls do contain barely malt powder which contains gluten. I was surprised at all of the conflicting information I found when I checked online.
    • trents
      @BlessedinBoston, it is possible that in Canada the product in question is formulated differently than in the USA or at least processed in in a facility that precludes cross contamination. I assume from your user name that you are in the USA. And it is also possible that the product meets the FDA requirement of not more than 20ppm of gluten but you are a super sensitive celiac for whom that standard is insufficient. 
    • BlessedinBoston
      No,Lindt is not gluten free no matter what they say on their website. I found out the hard way when I was newly diagnosed in 2000. At that time the Lindt truffles were just becoming popular and were only sold in small specialty shops at the mall. You couldn't buy them in any stores like today and I was obsessed with them 😁. Took me a while to get around to checking them and was heartbroken when I saw they were absolutely not gluten free 😔. Felt the same when I realized Twizzlers weren't either. Took me a while to get my diet on order after being diagnosed. I was diagnosed with small bowel non Hodgkins lymphoma at the same time. So it was a very stressful time to say the least. Hope this helps 😁.
    • knitty kitty
      @Jmartes71, I understand your frustration and anger.  I've been in a similar situation where no doctor took me seriously, accused me of making things up, and eventually sent me home to suffer alone.   My doctors did not recognize nutritional deficiencies.  Doctors are trained in medical learning institutions that are funded by pharmaceutical companies.  They are taught which medications cover up which symptoms.  Doctors are required to take twenty  hours of nutritional education in seven years of medical training.  (They can earn nine hours in Nutrition by taking a three day weekend seminar.)  They are taught nutritional deficiencies are passe' and don't happen in our well fed Western society any more.  In Celiac Disease, the autoimmune response and inflammation affects the absorption of ALL the essential vitamins and minerals.  Correcting nutritional deficiencies caused by malabsorption is essential!  I begged my doctor to check my Vitamin D level, which he did only after making sure my insurance would cover it.  When my Vitamin D came back extremely low, my doctor was very surprised, but refused to test for further nutritional deficiencies because he "couldn't make money prescribing vitamins.". I believe it was beyond his knowledge, so he blamed me for making stuff up, and stormed out of the exam room.  I had studied Nutrition before earning a degree in Microbiology.  I switched because I was curious what vitamins from our food were doing in our bodies.  Vitamins are substances that our bodies cannot manufacture, so we must ingest them every day.  Without them, our bodies cannot manufacture life sustaining enzymes and we sicken and die.   At home alone, I could feel myself dying.  It's an unnerving feeling, to say the least, and, so, with nothing left to lose, I relied in my education in nutrition.  My symptoms of Thiamine deficiency were the worst, so I began taking high dose Thiamine.  I had health improvement within an hour.  It was magical.  I continued taking high dose thiamine with a B Complex, magnesium. and other essential nutrients.  The health improvements continued for months.  High doses of thiamine are required to correct a thiamine deficiency because thiamine affects every cell and mitochondria in our bodies.    A twenty percent increase in dietary thiamine causes an eighty percent increase in brain function.  The cerebellum of the brain is most affected.  The cerebellum controls things we don't have to consciously have to think about, like digestion, balance, breathing, blood pressure, heart rate, hormone regulation, and many more.  Thiamine is absorbed from the digestive tract and sent to the most important organs like the brain and the heart.  This leaves the digestive tract depleted of Thiamine and symptoms of Gastrointestinal Beriberi, a thiamine deficiency localized in the digestive system, begin to appear.  Symptoms of Gastrointestinal Beriberi include anxiety, depression, chronic fatigue, headaches, Gerd, acid reflux, gas, slow stomach emptying, gastroparesis, bloating, diarrhea and/or constipation, incontinence, abdominal pain, IBS,  SIBO, POTS, high blood pressure, heart rate changes like tachycardia, difficulty swallowing, Barrett's Esophagus, peripheral neuropathy, and more. Doctors are only taught about thiamine deficiency in alcoholism and look for the classic triad of symptoms (changes in gait, mental function, and nystagmus) but fail to realize that gastrointestinal symptoms can precede these symptoms by months.  All three classic triad of symptoms only appear in fifteen percent of patients, with most patients being diagnosed with thiamine deficiency post mortem.  I had all three but swore I didn't drink, so I was dismissed as "crazy" and sent home to die basically.   Yes, I understand how frustrating no answers from doctors can be.  I took OTC Thiamine Hydrochloride, and later thiamine in the forms TTFD (tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide) and Benfotiamine to correct my thiamine deficiency.  I also took magnesium, needed by thiamine to make those life sustaining enzymes.  Thiamine interacts with each of the other B vitamins, so the other B vitamins must be supplemented as well.  Thiamine is safe and nontoxic even in high doses.   A doctor can administer high dose thiamine by IV along with the other B vitamins.  Again, Thiamine is safe and nontoxic even in high doses.  Thiamine should be given if only to rule Gastrointestinal Beriberi out as a cause of your symptoms.  If no improvement, no harm is done. Share the following link with your doctors.  Section Three is especially informative.  They need to be expand their knowledge about Thiamine and nutrition in Celiac Disease.  Ask for an Erythrocyte Transketolace Activity test for thiamine deficiency.  This test is more reliable than a blood test. Thiamine, gastrointestinal beriberi and acetylcholine signaling.  https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12014454/ Best wishes!
    • Jmartes71
      I have been diagnosed with celiac in 1994, in remission not eating wheat and other foods not to consume  my household eats wheat.I have diagnosed sibo, hernia ibs, high blood pressure, menopause, chronic fatigue just to name a few oh yes and Barrett's esophagus which i forgot, I currently have bumps in back of my throat, one Dr stated we all have bumps in the back of our throat.Im in pain.Standford specialist really dismissed me and now im really in limbo and trying to get properly cared for.I found a new gi and new pcp but its still a mess and medical is making it look like im a disability chaser when Im actively not well I look and feel horrible and its adding anxiety and depression more so.Im angery my condition is affecting me and its being down played 
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