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

Baby With Growth Way Off The Charts High And Then Dropped.


Aleshia

Recommended Posts

Aleshia Contributor

has anyone had a baby who was born big, gained huge amounts of weight in the first 4 months and then lost a few pounds before a year? my baby would have been in like the 140'th or higher percentile by the time he was 3 months old. he went from over 10 lb at birth to 26 lb by 4 mo. and then dropped to 24 lb by 11 mo. he's 16 mo now and is 28.5 lb which means that in the last 12 months he has only gained a couple of pounds... is that normal? it doesn't seem normal to me! anyone else seen this happen? the pediatrician doesn't seem to think its a problem because he's still around 90th percentile.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



stef-the-kicking-cuty Enthusiast

I was just yesterday wondering the same thing with my Lukas. Well, he's only 7 months old now. But when he was born, he had 6 lb 10 oz and then at 5 months, he was 17 pounds. And this did NOT change. Now at 7 months, he is still around 17 pounds. He didn't gain an ounce. This whole thing started, when we introduced solids and yes, he had gluten introduced between months 4 and 6, like the experts say and then taken it back out of the diet after that, like you should do.

I have no clue, what is going on. He is not on gluten anymore now.

Stef

Ursa Major Collaborator

Well, you know, I don't trust those 'experts' one bit. Personally, I think introducing gluten between 4 and 6 months to prevent celiac disease is purest nonsense, I would never do it.

Stef, that could have slowed down your son's weight gain and development, in my opinion. Make sure you don't give him dairy, and don't worry too much. And DON'T give him any gluten, either!

Aleshia, if your baby was mine, I would take gluten and dairy right out of his diet (and soy too, if he gets any) to see if it makes a difference. It sounds to me like he inherited celiac disease from you.

Aleshia Contributor
Aleshia, if your baby was mine, I would take gluten and dairy right out of his diet (and soy too, if he gets any) to see if it makes a difference. It sounds to me like he inherited celiac disease from you.

thanks ursa :) I'm just not sure what to think, I haven't even been diagnosed yet. I just had the blood draw for the celiac panel done today and on tuesday I had an ultrasound and they discovered gallstones. my dr. who is an internist was pretty convinced that there is no way that I could have celiac disease because I don't have diarrhea and I haven't been losing weight... its funny cause i'm overweight and constipated which can be symptoms too and it seems like the only time I do lose weight without trying really hard is when I do have diarrhea! anyway, I have done some research and it seems that gallstones are a pretty common thing for celiacs! and I have SO MANY other symptoms that can't really be explained by anything else. I'm 30 years old and in the last 3 years I have lost more than 2 inches of height, dr's look at me funny when I say that... and this last dr I went to was like "well thats a pretty difficult thing to know for sure..." I was thinking... a couple centimeters my be hard to know for sure but more than 2 inches!? its a pretty easily measured thing!... anyway sorry for just going on and on. I think as soon as I get my blood test results back I'm going to put the whole family on a gluten free diet and see how it goes... cause I'm pretty sure that at least 3 of the 5 of us have it!

Aleshia Contributor
I was just yesterday wondering the same thing with my Lukas. Well, he's only 7 months old now. But when he was born, he had 6 lb 10 oz and then at 5 months, he was 17 pounds. And this did NOT change. Now at 7 months, he is still around 17 pounds. He didn't gain an ounce. This whole thing started, when we introduced solids and yes, he had gluten introduced between months 4 and 6, like the experts say and then taken it back out of the diet after that, like you should do.

I have no clue, what is going on. He is not on gluten anymore now.

Stef

in some ways I'm glad I'm not the only one! but in other ways I'm sad that someone else has to go through the uncertainty. did your dr say anything about it? I neglected to take zimri to the dr for well child checks because he was still so chubby and happy and his developement other than that seemed to be so good and I wasn't getting him immunized on the normal schedule... now I regret that because they don't have his growth recorded on THEIR charts so they don't believe me... the dr was like "thats pretty unlikely... if his weight really did that then it would have gone straight up on the graph..." IT DID GO STRAIGHT UP ON THE GRAPH! I hate it cause its like she's saying it would be a serious thing if that did happen but won't take it seriously because she doesn't believe me!

anyway sorry for ranting to you :)

mommida Enthusiast

Pediatricians won't do much until your child drops down off the charts. Then they will diagnose "failure to thrive".

Moms you have to trust your mom instincts on this, really because even the testing for celiac isn't that reliable for you children's age.

For the record, my daughter stopped gaining weight at 7 months too. Considering she still grew in height, I say she lost weight. She was diagnosed probable Celiac Disease at 17 months. She did not gain weight until she started the gluten free diet. (10 months of not gaining weight~ and nothing was done until I requested testing for Celiac!! because she didn't fall of the growth chart)

Ursa Major Collaborator

Aleshia, I am afraid that your significant loss in height might be due to osteoporosis. Yes, even CHILDREN with celiac disease have been diagnosed with osteoporosis!

I suggest you ask to have a bone density test done, and be tested for vitamin D, calcium and magnesium as well.

If your doctor won't believe you, switch doctors, Way too many doctors are woefully ignorant about celiac disease and gluten intolerance. And they know even less about nutrition.

I am glad you will try your family on a gluten-free diet, regardless of test results. Those tests are notoriously unreliable for young children, and only somewhat less so in adults. We have members here who had negative blood tests, but positive biopsies.

But even if both blood work and biopsy are negative, celiac disease cannot be ruled out.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Aleshia Contributor
Pediatricians won't do much until your child drops down off the charts. Then they will diagnose "failure to thrive".

Moms you have to trust your mom instincts on this, really because even the testing for celiac isn't that reliable for you children's age.

For the record, my daughter stopped gaining weight at 7 months too. Considering she still grew in height, I say she lost weight. She was diagnosed probable Celiac Disease at 17 months. She did not gain weight until she started the gluten free diet. (10 months of not gaining weight~ and nothing was done until I requested testing for Celiac!! because she didn't fall of the growth chart)

well considering he is currently in the 90th percentile I would say it is gonna be a LONG time before he falls off the charts :( stupid dr.s... I have had very few good experiences with dr.s in my life! and even then they end up disappointing me somewhere along the line...

cyberprof Enthusiast

The research I've done (for teenagers and growth) says that if children "cross percentiles" that is a bad sign. Like if a child is always at 10% for height that's ok. It's when they go from 100th percentile to 25th percentile that it is important. As Ursa said, try another doctor and also try gluten free. Good advice. Best of luck to you - I hope it helps.

~Laura

Aleshia Contributor
The research I've done (for teenagers and growth) says that if children "cross percentiles" that is a bad sign. Like if a child is always at 10% for height that's ok. It's when they go from 100th percentile to 25th percentile that it is important. As Ursa said, try another doctor and also try gluten free. Good advice. Best of luck to you - I hope it helps.

~Laura

hi, thanks. I know how many percentiles he would have crossed since he was so high off the charts! I know he did cross some though... its just not being taken seriously

I think I'm going to show the dr. the growth chart that I did myself and show her just how much of a difference there is... its just scary to think that my baby has only gained 2 lb.s in 12 mo. he's been in size 2 clothing since he was 4 months old... it saves money on clothes but its not healthy!

Aleshia Contributor
hi, thanks. I know how many percentiles he would have crossed ...

that was supposed to read "I don't know how many..."

Pattymom Newbie

I don't know if your babies were breastfed or not, but a strong or overactive let-down often leads to extreme weight gain in the firts 3-4 months, followed by a drop off, usually discovered with confusion around the 6 month check-up. That might explain early bursts of high weight gain. Also, some babies dont' gain as much when they start moving, their heights should stay on the curve. I would be worried if the drop off continued past 6-7 months without recovery

That said, trust your mothering instincts, if you think there is something wrong, there probably is. All my kids are under teh 25% for size, though only the last one fell off her curve. No one could understand why I was worried because " all your kids are small" I'm the mom and I knew the difference.

good luck finding good medical help.

Patty

Aleshia Contributor
I don't know if your babies were breastfed or not, but a strong or overactive let-down often leads to extreme weight gain in the firts 3-4 months, followed by a drop off, usually discovered with confusion around the 6 month check-up. That might explain early bursts of high weight gain. Also, some babies dont' gain as much when they start moving, their heights should stay on the curve. I would be worried if the drop off continued past 6-7 months without recovery

That said, trust your mothering instincts, if you think there is something wrong, there probably is. All my kids are under teh 25% for size, though only the last one fell off her curve. No one could understand why I was worried because " all your kids are small" I'm the mom and I knew the difference.

good luck finding good medical help.

Patty

I breastfed for 11 months. I also breastfed my other 2 and their weight was high right from the beginning too but stayed high all the way through. nothing changed when I started solids

tweetykl Newbie

My son was 21lbs at 6 months and only 22 lbs. at 14 months when he was diagnosed with a wheat allergy. We had no idea but were concerned for a very long time about his lack of weight gain. We already knew he was allergic to milk because they talked me into putting him on formula and within 24 hours we had it figured out. We had only gone into the allergist because we wanted the milk allergy diagnosed.

I really do believe that children that do not gain weight all of sudden are having allergy issues. Another parent I knew was going through similar issues and the child was diagnosed failure to thrive and come to find out, a year late she was diagnosed celiac.

Mother's instinct truly should rule over the doctor's opinions. Go with your gut and find a specialist in your area, allergist or GI doc.

Aleshia Contributor
My son was 21lbs at 6 months and only 22 lbs. at 14 months when he was diagnosed with a wheat allergy. We had no idea but were concerned for a very long time about his lack of weight gain. We already knew he was allergic to milk because they talked me into putting him on formula and within 24 hours we had it figured out. We had only gone into the allergist because we wanted the milk allergy diagnosed.

I really do believe that children that do not gain weight all of sudden are having allergy issues. Another parent I knew was going through similar issues and the child was diagnosed failure to thrive and come to find out, a year late she was diagnosed celiac.

Mother's instinct truly should rule over the doctor's opinions. Go with your gut and find a specialist in your area, allergist or GI doc.

thanks :) I'll look into it. I actually have a naturopath dr that I see sometimes, she is the one that did my blood test (should have results back in about 3 days!) anyway she sees children and I trust her so I'm gonna get the kids an appointment asap. She may not catch everything the first time but she listens to what I have to say and takes it seriously and if I ask her to do a test she is more than willing and is very very thorough!

feedmykids Rookie

Make your Doctor listen to you! I am only 4' 10" so when my babies were very small and not even on the weight and height charts the doctors would say "well the Mom is very small" WE finally heard about celiac and had my girls tested. One of my DD's came up VERY positive. And guess what - after that I got tested too and came up positive too!

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. - knitty kitty replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      9

      Feel like I’m starting over

    2. - Scatterbrain replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      9

      Feel like I’m starting over

    3. - knitty kitty replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      9

      Feel like I’m starting over

    4. - knitty kitty replied to Larzipan's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      34

      Has anyone had terrible TMJ/ Jaw Pain from undiagnosed Celiac?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,311
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    EMP6543
    Newest Member
    EMP6543
    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

    • knitty kitty
      Check your multivitamin to see if it contains Thiamine Mononitrate, which is a "shelf-stable" form of thiamine that doesn't break down with exposure to light, heat, and time sitting on a shelf waiting to be sold.  Our bodies have difficulty absorbing and utilizing it.  Only 30% is absorbed and less can be utilized.   There's some question as to how well multivitamins dissolve in the digestive tract.  You can test this at home.  YouTube has instructional videos.   Talk to your nutritionist about adding a B Complex.  The B vitamins are water soluble, so any excess is easily excreted if not needed.  Consider adding additional Thiamine in the forms Benfotiamine or TTFD (tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide) or thiamine hydrochloride.   Thiamine is needed to help control electrolytes.  Without sufficient thiamine, the kidneys loose electrolytes easily resulting in low sodium and chloride.   We need extra thiamine when we're emotionally stressed, physically ill, and when we exercise regularly, are an athlete, or do physical labor outdoors, and in hot weather.  Your return to activities and athletics may have depleted your thiamine and other B vitamins to a point symptoms are appearing.   The deficiency symptoms of B vitamins overlap, and can be pretty vague, or easily written off as due to something else like being tired after a busy day.  The symptoms you listed are the same as early B vitamin deficiency symptoms, especially Thiamine.  Thiamine deficiency symptoms can appear in as little as three days.  I recognize the symptoms as those I had when I was deficient.  It can get much worse. "My symptoms are as follows: Dizziness, lightheaded, headaches (mostly sinus), jaw/neck pain, severe tinnitus, joint stiffness, fatigue, irregular heart rate, post exercise muscle fatigue and soreness, brain fog, insomnia.  Generally feeling unwell." I took a B 50 Complex twice a day and extra thiamine in the forms Benfotiamine and TTFD.  I currently take the Ex Plus supplement used in this study which shows B vitamins, especially Thiamine B 1, Riboflavin B2, Pyridoxine B 6, and B12 Cobalamine are very helpful.   A functional evaluation of anti-fatigue and exercise performance improvement following vitamin B complex supplementation in healthy humans, a randomized double-blind trial https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10542023/
    • Scatterbrain
      I am taking a multivitamin which is pretty bolstered with B’s.  Additional Calcium, D3, Magnesium, Vit C, and Ubiquinol.  Started Creapure creatine monohydrate in June for athletic recovery and brain fog.  I have been working with a Nutritionist along side my Dr. since February.  My TTG IGA levels in January were 52.8 and my DGP IGA was >250 (I don’t know the exact number since it was so high).  All my other labs were normal except Sodium and Chloride which were low.  I have more labs coming up in Dec.  I make my own bread, and don’t eat a lot of processed gluten-free snacks.
    • knitty kitty
      @Scatterbrain, What supplements are you taking? I agree that the problem may be nutritional deficiencies.  It's worth talking to a dietician or nutritionist about.   Did you get a Marsh score at your diagnosis?  Was your tTg IgA level very high?  These can indicate more intestinal damage and poorer absorption of nutrients.   Are you eating processed gluten free food stuffs?  Have you looked into the Autoimmune Protocol Diet?  
    • knitty kitty
      Vitamin and mineral deficiencies can make TMJ worse.  Vitamins like B12 , Thiamine B1, and Pyridoxine B6 help relieve pain.  Half of the patients in one study were deficient in these three vitamins in one study below. Malabsorption of vitamins and minerals is common in celiac disease.  It's important to eat healthy nutrient dense diets like the Autoimmune Protocol Diet, a Paleo diet that has similarities to the Mediterranean diet mentioned in one of the studies.   Is there a link between diet and painful temporomandibular disorders? A cross-sectional study https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12442269/   Nutritional Strategies for Chronic Craniofacial Pain and Temporomandibular Disorders: Current Clinical and Preclinical Insights https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11397166/   Serum nutrient deficiencies in the patient with complex temporomandibular joint problems https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2446412/  
    • Iam
      Yes.  I have had the tmj condition for 40 years. My only help was strictly following celiac and also eliminating soy.  Numerous dental visits and several professionally made bite plates  did very little to help with symptoms
×
×
  • 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.