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Celiac Disease Versus Sensitivity, Casein, And Vegetarian Resources


TardyTurtle

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TardyTurtle Newbie

Hi Everyone,

I am so glad for this web site and community. I have been fatigued for years now and I am so hopeful that my health will improve soon.

I just received my lab results (enterolab) two days ago confirming active dietary gluten sensitivity, autoimmune reaction to transglutaminase, elevated anti-casein (cow's milk) IgA antibody, and two copies of a gene that predisposes to gluten sensitivity (HLA-DQ 3,1 (Subtype 7,6)) However, do not possess the main HLA-DQB1 genes predisposing to celiac sprue.

I haven't been able to stop thinking about what this confirmation means for me. I have an appt with my doc in a couple weeks, and my mind is swimming. I would really appreciate any help in addressing my questions (my apologies if these are answered somewhere else on the site - if you aware aware please re-direct me :)

First - Do my results indicate Celiac disease - or is that only diagnosed after a positive biopsy? Is there benefit to having this done?

Should I give up ALL dairy including cheese?

Any advice/resources for a vegetarian, gluten, and caesin free, and low soy diet? I need to reduce soy also because I learned it can worsen my hypothyroidism.

Thanks so much!


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RiceGuy Collaborator

The test results do sound like Celiac, but some people want to get all the tests they can, just for their peace of mind. Often though, a positive response to the gluten-free diet is far more convincing, especially given the unreliability of the tests. So no matter how lab results look, trying the diet is always a good idea.

All cheese made from dairy contains casein AFAIK, so you'd need to avoid that. Some members however, have expressed that they can eat goat cheese without difficulty, in varying amounts.

You'll find many members can help with meal ideas. Often the suggestion to those new to the gluten-free diet is to keep it simple at first. Fresh veggies, fruits, etc. Add more things as you go. Beans, lentils, nuts, seeds, and whole grains are very good sources of dense nutrients, including protein and fiber. Dark leafy greens are always good too, as long as you're not allergic.

Some grains to consider are buckwheat (not related to wheat, and not actually a grain), amaranth, millet, sorghum, t'eff, quinoa, and of course brown rice. Roasted buckwheat has a nicer flavor than the raw, and is usually called Kasha. It works well as a hot cereal too. Amaranth cooks up like grits or cream of rice IMO, and just 1/4 cup has the protein of a whole egg.

Welcome to the board!

TardyTurtle Newbie

Thanks so much, Rice Guy, for the warm welcome and suggestions. I found some great gluten free stuff - buckwheat, rice pasta, beans, and of course nuts, seeds, veggies, fruits, etc. at whole foods. I am finding the Amy's frozen gluten free meals to be especially helpful at this point.

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    • Aretaeus Cappadocia
      makes sense. sometimes you learn one path and never question it until you see someone take a different path
    • xxnonamexx
      Interesting I read that toasted kasha groats have nutty flavor which I thought like oatmeal with banana and yogurt. Yes quinoa I have for dinner looking to switch oatmeal to buckwheat for breakfast. I have to look into amaranth 
    • Aretaeus Cappadocia
      I've never tried bananas or yogurt with kasha. It would probably work but in my mind I think of kasha as being on the savory side so I always add butter, peanut butter, or shredded cheddar cheese. Next time I make it I will try yogurt and banana to see for myself. Amaranth has a touch of sweet and I like to pair it with fruit. Quinoa is more neutral. I eat it plain, like rice, with chicken stock or other savory things, or with coconut milk. Since coconut milk works, I would think yogurt would work (with the quinoa). I went to the link you posted. I really don't know why they rinse the kasha. I've eaten it for decades and never rinsed it. Other than that, her recipe seems fine (that is, add the buckwheat with the water, rather than wait until the water is boiling). She does say something that I forgot: you want to get roasted/toasted buckwheat or you will need to toast it yourself. I've never tried buckwheat flakes. One potential issue with flakes is that there are more processing steps and as a rule of thumb, every processing step is another opportunity for cross-contamination. I have tried something that was a finer grind of the buckwheat than the whole/coarse and I didn't like it as much. But, maybe that was simply because it wasn't "normal" to me, I don't know.
    • xxnonamexx
      The basic seems more like oatmeal. You can also add yogurt banana to it like oatmeal right. I see rinsing as first step in basic recipes like this one https://busycooks.com/how-to-cook-toasted-buckwheat-groats-kasha/ I don't understand why since kasha is toasted and not raw. What about buckwheat flake cereal or is this better to go with. 
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      Celiac disease can have neurological associations, but the better-described ones include gluten ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, headaches or migraine, seizures, cognitive symptoms, and, rarely, cerebral calcifications or white-matter changes. Some studies and case reports describe brain white-matter lesions in people with celiac disease, but these are not specific to celiac disease and can have many other explanations. A frontal lobe lesion could mean many different things depending on the exact wording of the report: a white-matter spot, inflammation, demyelination, a small old stroke, migraine-related change, infection, trauma, vascular change, seizure-related change, tumor-like lesion, artifact, or something that resolved on repeat imaging. The word “transient” usually means it changed or disappeared, which can happen with some inflammatory, seizure-related, migraine-related, vascular, or imaging-artifact situations.  Hopefully they will find nothing serious.
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