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

Overwhelmed With 15 Month Old


georgeismyboy

Recommended Posts

georgeismyboy Newbie

Hello everyone! Thank you in advance for taking the time to listen to me "think out loud".

My son is almost 15 months. He (still) has severe reflux and some some food allergies as well as milk intolerance. He was failure to thrive for much of his infancy. We started on the typical infant cereal grains at 6 months, all met with instant vomitting. By seven months he still wasn't tolerating any solids so GI did a scope and biopsy, initially suspecting Eosinophilic Esohpagitis (neg). We attempted gluten again at 8 months, again with the vomitting. I quickly took him off all grains and his reflux quickly improved. We strictly avoided gluten until 12 months.

In the mean time (at 9 months), pediatrician did a "Celiac panel" blood test. It was negative. I asked at the time if he needed to be on gluten (which he was not) and he said no, it tests the antibodies that are already in your body. I've been reading so much information since that completely contradicts that theory.

Fast foward to now and my guy has been on gluten for almost three full months now. His reflux had almost completely resolved by 12 months when he was gluten free. He is now vomitting daily, refluxing, passing foul gas around the clock (I literally hear him tooting on the baby monitor through the night), belching after a couple bites of food, light colored soft stools, and generally miserable.

Our pediatrician has closed the book on Celiac and says he just has reflux. I am not willing to let it go. We have an appt with a new ped GI to discuss everything and I will be insistant that we explore every possible diagnosis, Celiac or otherwise.

I guess my question(s) are - is he too young to be accurately diagnosed with Celiac? I've read so many conflicting things about the accuracy of dx'ing children under age 3-5. Do you need to be on gluten to have an accurate blood panel? Any additional thoughts would be appreciated. I am so anxious to bring some relief to my little guy.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



gfpaperdoll Rookie

Highly unlikely that you will get a positive blood or biopsy diagnosis that young.

You do have a diagnosis though, through dietary results, which is the ultimate test.

For relief - quit feeding the child grains, dairy & soy.

yes, you have to be eating gluten for the test to be positive - usually. Some will test positive while not eating grains - but a lot will also test negative. greater chance it will be negative if you are not eating gluten.

you can quit eating gluten & get an accurate test thru enterolab.com

You can also get a gene test thru them...

Since your baby has had this awhile, you might want to think about getting blood work to check for all vitamin and mineral levels...

Sorry you are having to go thru this - hard lesson to learn that most doctors are not any help...

Ursa Major Collaborator

At your sons age, the best and most reliable test is to try the gluten-free diet. You've really always known that he is gluten intolerant. Unfortunately, you have an ignorant GI and an even more ignorant pediatrician. Neither one knows a thing about celiac disease it seems to me.

Usually blood work and biopsies on children that young will only be positive if the child is already on deaths door. You've allowed the testing to be done, it was negative and completely useless.

It is now time to take control of your son's health, and to ignore those ignorant doctors completely.

Please take your son off all gluten, and don't put him back on it for anything at all! Because he is the one who will suffer if you don't follow your own common sense.

He has celiac disease, despite negative test results. Just accept that and move on.

georgeismyboy Newbie

I am so touched by your thoughts and support!

Thank you for suggesting he get labs done to look for vit and other deficiencies. Ped ran labs last week and indeed they are off. His alkaline phosphatase is 1100 (normal would be up to 300), which might indicate malabsorption of Vitamin D, which in turn might indicate malabsorption of fat since Vit D is fat soluable. Constistent with Celiac's, am I wrong? I will make sure our new GI is aware of this next week.

Ped is very against a restricted diet. Because of his history of poor growth, he wants us on anything he doesn't test positve allergic to. He's not allergic to milk but I refuse to go down that road again, and he's very sensitive to soy so we limit that. Ironically my boy has gained three pounds in the last three months after gaining nothing for a long time. Ped takes this as proof that he should be eating anything and everything. From the look of him, I'd say his weight gain is purely from bloating, water retention and inflammed tissues. He looks like he could pop!

Thank you again for reassuring me that I should go with my gut and remove gluten, dairy and soy from his diet. I know this is a life-altering choice, especially for a young child who's facing some tough and cruel school-aged years ahead. I only get support from my husband - our families think we're idiots for doing anything without a diagnosis. But I know I have to do what's best for my son's health.

I will definately consider doing Enterolab. I have a friend from my reflux support group that did this with her two children and was pleased with the service and felt confident about the results.

God bless!

nora-n Rookie

GI doc told my doctor he excluded celiac, but there is no such thing. I was off gluten , then back on gluten for five weeks and had a negative biopsy. Blood tests were negative (taken beforethe gluten challenge but afte some months gluten-free)

I had thought that antibodies would stay around for a while, but these celiac antibody tests re deisgned to only be positive when therer is visible damage to the villi......so one must be consuming a lot of gluten for a long time.

Doctor is nuts if he excludes celiac, or says the antibody test is still valid after being off gluten.

I wouod say, go to the new gastro doc and get new antibody tests done , they might have turned positive by now, maybe, maybe not.

My DD2 got aceliac diagnosis in her 20's. She was ill since about three, with floating stools etc. Doctors kept telling me small children have nervous problems when they complain about tummy aches, not tummy problems....

nora

Worriedtodeath Enthusiast

Do the diet and ignore the drs. We only need them to run the tests but that doesn't mean they have the knowledge to understand them. Remember in highschool the kids you were in school with? One of them became a dr. Does that make you feel better?? It certainly didn't make me feel any better to think that one of those yahoos grew up and became a dr. Or the pathologist who reads the test or the pot head who become the lab tech. Especially the kid who couldn't find his way out of a wet paper bag BUt that's another thread itself....

Our baby is 22 months old and despite having 3 drs agree she has Celiac all have backed down when the biopsy came back negative. Despite blood labs that went up on gluten and down off it, desptie low nutrients, despite poor growth, FTT, depsite the typical Celiac body look, despite negative allergy test and food intolerance diet trials, despite lactose/casien allergy, despite low sugars and abnormal ones, despite every sign and symptom that supports an orderly progression to stage 3 and 4 Celiac disease, our dx is finally a wheat/casien allergy. ????? we are to continue Gluten-free Casein-free for 6 months and then reintroduce wheat . Any symptoms return, we will be sent to a research center like Duke university to let them poke, prod, and rerun tests that won't show Celiac at her age with a very limited amount of gluten ingestion. Who wants to do that??? Drs don't know it all and Celiac/gluten issues are simply out in complete and total left field. Remember how lonely left field is in baseball???? you can hear the crickets sing! Our ped even admitted that we may very well have an issue that has yet to be idenitified and given a name by the medical field and that we may have to live knowing that the drs can't do anything other than what is in their very thick books. As our ped said I can't give you a dx that you don't match the criteria for and I can't make one up because there isn't one that exists at this time. And the Non Celiac Gluten sensitivity doesn't have set criteria or markers to dx with. So that's us in a nutshell. We have a great ped who is stuck with insurance and dx that have to be met.

We have 3 kids and myself that don't fit the criteria and have to make the choice of eat wheat and be sick or do without and feel great. I asked my 10 year old if he wanted to go back on gluten and he said "NO ! No way mom. I don't ever want to feel that bad again even if there is no reason I should feel that bad. Crazy and great is better than sane and sick."

So I think my 10 year old has the best answer! I'd rather be "crazy" and great than "sane" and sick!!!

Stacie

kbtoyssni Contributor

Ditto what everyone else said. Go with your gut and get this kid off gluten! It's hard to have a gluten-free kid, but it's harder to have your child get sicker and sicker, to watch him start developing additional, irreversible health issues due to undiagnosed celiac, to have a kid that's too sick to go to school or do anything.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Ursa Major Collaborator
Thank you for suggesting he get labs done to look for vit and other deficiencies. Ped ran labs last week and indeed they are off. His alkaline phosphatase is 1100 (normal would be up to 300), which might indicate malabsorption of Vitamin D, which in turn might indicate malabsorption of fat since Vit D is fat soluable. Constistent with Celiac's, am I wrong? I will make sure our new GI is aware of this next week.

It sounds like your son needs to take cod liver oil. It will supply him with easy to digest vitamin D as well as essential fatty acids and vitamin A. The Carlson brand is best, and doesn't taste bad.

Lack of vitamin D is very serious. And when you consider that calcium and magnesium can't be absorbed by the body without vitamin D, you get into even bigger problems. Young children with celiac disease have been diagnosed with osteoporosis as a result!

Poor little guy. Please let us know how he does on the gluten-free diet. The tests with Enterolab are valid for up to a year after eliminating gluten, so he won't have to be eating gluten for those tests.

georgeismyboy Newbie

Thank you for the cod liver oil suggestion. I will definately look into that!

georgeismyboy Newbie

Stacie, thank you for your thoughts and suggestions - you are so right. You know, my sister-in-law is in med school and well on her way to doctorhood. Let me tell you how scary that is! So I totally get your point about doctors.

I am so sorry your little one is going through so much as well. It is so sad to think of the procedures and tests they will put these babies through. I realize they're being thorough by ruling out other serious conditions, but it seems like a waste of resources on top of being traumatizing for these kids. I know he needs to be off gluten, milk and soy, and if he were off those I'm confident that he could get off Prevacid, his reflux would go away and his body would be restored. Our GI appt is next week and unless this woman gives me an earth-moving reason to keep him on gluten, off he goes. I cannot stand to see him suffer anymore.

I hope you get the answers you need with your toddler. You are very lucky to have such a wise older girl to set everything straight!

georgeismyboy Newbie

I just ordered my little guy's EnteroLab tests - wish us luck!

;)

Ursa Major Collaborator

Way to go! I am sure we all know what the results will be. Please post the results when they are in!

gfpaperdoll Rookie

Oh Good For You !!!!! Please let us know the results. It will be the best money you ever spent...

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,930
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Mhp
    Newest Member
    Mhp
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Wheatwacked
      Definitely get vitamin D 25(OH)D.  Celiac Disease causes vitamin D deficiency and one of the functions of vitamin D is modulating the genes.  While we can survive with low vitamin D as an adaptation to living in a seasonal environment, the homeostasis is 200 nmol/L.  Vitamin D Receptors are found in nearly every cell with a nucleus,while the highest concentrations are in tissues like the intestine, kidney, parathyroid, and bone.  A cellular communication system, if you will. The vitamin D receptor: contemporary genomic approaches reveal new basic and translational insights  Possible Root Causes of Histamine Intolerance. "Low levels of certain nutrients like copper, Vitamins A, B6, and C can lead to histamine build up along with excess or deficient levels of iron. Iodine also plays a crucial role in histamine regulation."  
    • AnnaNZ
      I forgot to mention my suspicion of the high amount of glyphosate allowed to be used on wheat in USA and NZ and Australia. My weight was 69kg mid-2023, I went down to 60kg in March 2024 and now hover around 63kg (just after winter here in NZ) - wheat-free and very low alcohol consumption.
    • AnnaNZ
      Hi Jess Thanks so much for your response and apologies for the long delay in answering. I think I must have been waiting for something to happen before I replied and unfortunately it fell off the radar... I have had an upper endoscopy and colonoscopy in the meantime (which revealed 'minor' issues only). Yes I do think histamine intolerance is one of the problems. I have been lowering my histamine intake and feeling a lot better. And I do think it is the liver which is giving the pain. I am currently taking zinc (I have had three low zinc tests now), magnesium, B complex, vitamin E and a calcium/Vitamin C mix. I consciously think about getting vitamin D outside. (Maybe I should have my vitamin D re-tested now...) I am still 100% gluten-free. My current thoughts on the cause of the problems is some, if not all, of the following: Genetically low zinc uptake, lack of vitamin D, wine drinking (alcohol/sulphites), covid, immune depletion, gastroparesis, dysbiosis, leaky gut, inability to process certain foods I am so much better than late 2023 so feel very positive 🙂    
    • lehum
      Hi and thank you very much for your detailed response! I am so glad that the protocol worked so well for you and helped you to get your health back on track. I've heard of it helping other people too. One question I have is how did you maintain your weight on this diet? I really rely on nuts and rice to keep me at a steady weight because I tend to lose weight quickly and am having a hard time envisioning how to make it work, especially when not being able to eat things like nuts and avocados. In case you have any input, woud be great to hear it! Friendly greetings.
    • Hmart
      I was not taking any medications previous to this. I was a healthy 49 yo with some mild stomach discomfort. I noticed the onset of tinnitus earlier this year and I had Covid at the end of June. My first ‘flare-up’ with these symptoms was in August and I was eating gluten like normal. I had another flare-up in September and then got an upper endo at the end of September that showed possible celiac. My blood test came a week later. While I didn’t stop eating gluten before I had the blood test, I had cut back on food and gluten both. I had a flare-up with this symptoms after one week of gluten free but wasn’t being crazy careful. Then I had another flare-up this week. I think it might have been caused by Trader Joe’s baked tofu which I didn’t realize had wheat. But I don’t know if these flare-ups are caused by gluten or if there’s something else going on. I am food journaling and tracking all symptoms. I have lost 7 pounds in the last 10 days. 
×
×
  • 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.