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Are These All The Right Tests, And Do I Trust The Results?


Breila

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Breila Explorer

I got my copy of my blood work that was done. I will say that I would never have considered getting the tests if my son were not diagnosed, and I have few GI problems, so I did the test more to rule out celiac than confirm. But after hanging out here for awhile, I'm all paranoid that I didn't get the right tests, or shouldn't necessarily trust these results, yk?

The tests were performed by Spectrum Laboratory Network. These are the results:

Tissue Transglutaminase Ab Result: <3 Indication: Negative

Gliadin Peptide Ab, IgG: result: <3 Indication: Negative

Gliadin Peptide Ab IgA: Result: <3 Indication: negative

Reticulin Anitbody, IgA: Result: <1:10

Input? Right tests, yes or no? Lab ok?

Thanks for any input!


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Lisa Mentor

Amy,

These are the tests that are recommended.

Anti-gliadin antibodies (AGA) both IgA and IgG

Anti-endomysial antibodies (EMA) - IgA

Anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies (tTG) - IgA

Total IgA level.

The blood panel can rule Celiac IN, but it cannot rule it OUT. There is a level of inaccuracy in the blood test as well as the endoscopy/biopsy.

If your son is diagnosed, it's a fair bet that you have Celiac or at least a gluten intolerance. A positive dietary response will be a good indicator.

Did they supply you with your testing ranges?

Breila Explorer

So I'm missing the EMA then? How important is that?

Testing ranges, yes.

For the tTG:

<5 - negative

5-8 - equivocal

>8 - positive

Mine was <3

For the IgG and IgA:

<11 - negative

11-17 - equivocal

>17 - positive

Mine were <3 and 5, respectively

No range for the Reticulen Antibody test

Breila Explorer

Adding, it appears I'm missing the total IgA as well. What would you rec. as my next step? Back to the Dr. to request missing tests? On to a GI (that was what the Dr. rec. IF I feel like I need to take it further).

I'll be honest, I have no severe GI symptoms, nothing that interferes in my daily life, yk? But I do have issues that *could* be related to gluten, or IMO, they could just be normal side effects of life and the food I eat. I don't want to be celiac, obviously, who does? But I do want to know, does that make sense?

I would be more inclined to think that my husband is the genetic carrier of celiac in this family, his family has a long history of GI problems, his sister and mother have been diagnosed IBS, and his father has a diagnosed wheat allergy, and I think he does too, I just think that his issues are normal for him and therefore he doesn't see a problem, does that make sense?

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