Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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

Length Of Discomfort After A Glutening


texas

Recommended Posts

texas Apprentice

Whenever I have been glutened, I have all the symptons including brain fog for 4-5 days. Then, when i think all is well it seems like I get fresh symptons. How long does it take for gluten to go through a body? I know I haven't been reglutened because I am extremely careful. I was diagnosed in May. Am I still in the healing phase? Will my reactions get lesser when my gut is healed?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



oceangirl Collaborator

Yes, it can take up to a week or more if you get glutened and, yes, you are still in the healing stage. This can take awhile to iron out, but know you are not alone. Read back into posts and you will learn a lot! Drink lots of water when glutened and return always to your known safe foods for a bit.Other intolerances may be showing up as well and for this you will need to do an elimination diet to discover what's up. Always remember to check your personal care products for hidden gluten. A food diary is an immense help!

Hang in there; it will get better and easier with time- we've all been there!

lisa

texas Apprentice

Thank you, I think I just needed my own affirmation. I also know how careful I am . Sometimes I think my nerves make the stituation worse or cause the IBS to kick in.

AndrewNYC Explorer
Thank you, I think I just needed my own affirmation. I also know how careful I am . Sometimes I think my nerves make the stituation worse or cause the IBS to kick in.

Could be fructose malabsorption or some other carbohydrate/sugar malasborption involved. Fructose gave me brain fog well after I thought I was over celiac. Whether or not that is the case, you could try an elemental diet formula (Tolerex, Vivonex, E028, etc) for a brief period to see if that helps your symptoms.

Eric-C Enthusiast

Gluten gives me all kinds of fits.

Brain fog, migraines, you name it. For usually 2 weeks. I went on a hot dog eating binge after discovering they taste great without buns...oops...it was a slow ride down that I didn't catch until I crashed.

Migraines, panic attacks, anxiety, sore muscles, never tired. That lasted 2 weeks with the first 2-3 days being the most intense. Sugar is a big part of it. Gluten sets me off to sugar and I just finished healing up last week and am back to what I enjoy.

Now wheat is different. Wheat puts me in the crapper for the night in bad pain but that clears up in a day or two.

I've taken Alegra of all things that helps calm the histamene response so you don't get the flu feeling but that mostly only helps with wheat.

It takes time...and you have to pay attention to your body. When I had a bad gluten episode which is thankfully only once or twice a year I eat every hour and make sure I keep my sugar levels and all that equal.

The difference between it bothering you 1-2 weeks versus 1-2 months is in you. Just pay attention and learn a food routine that works for you. When its really bad for me I wake up with a racing heart and have the worlds worst nightmares. Thats usually the first 2-3 days. Eating natural sugars regularly seems to help me. I can go a week like that but eating watermelon right before bed usually cuts it down to 2-3 days.

Massages help my migraines and muscle pain.

Personally for all the pain and trouble I find the entire experience fasinating...My recoveries are gradual to a point and then immediate. I literally can feel like crap one hour then the next POOF I'm fine and good until it happens again. Once I recover I can eat and do whatever I want, its like someone flipped a switch.

I've been there where I didn't think I was going to get better...not so much last time because I've been through it. The best thing I can recommend is write it down...all of it.

That way you will be able to track your progress and put together a roadmap.

That helps me the most, I know I will get better and the stages I go through.

To me its a great reminder of how lucky I am to have caught this early on and how much healthier I am because of it.

There is always the light at the end of the tunnel.

I personally am not a big believer in all the vitamins and stuff...you want your body to relearn how to get those things from the food you eat. If your going beyond working to stop your most severe reactions then your not letting your body relearn.

For me I think its about sugar/leaky gut. I have to get my body used to using it properly again. Thats why I eat natural sugar every 1-3 hours deppending on how I feel, that keeps me level in a lot ways why my body heals.

Rya Newbie

Texas,

I don't think 2 weeks to feel the effects of a glutening is outrageous at all. It takes your intestines 3 to 6 months to heal each time you are glutened, depending on the extent of your body's reaction and the severity of your disease.

I bet you know this, but other foods that one can generally tolerate become difficult to tolerate after a glutening. I wouldn't assume any extra food sensitivities unless you are experiencing symptoms one month outside of an accidental glutening. Even then, it's usually gluten sneaking in. On the other hand if one food makes you feel bad consistently, cut it out, of course.

oceangirl Collaborator

I just need to say, in regard to Eric C's post, that gluten is the protein found in wheat, barley and rye that triggers an autoimmune response in folks with celiac. Sometimes it is tricky to weed through people's intended good advice and get to the heart of an issue surrounding this disease. Read, read, read and ask, ask , ask is my best advice.

lisa


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Eric-C Enthusiast
I just need to say, in regard to Eric C's post, that gluten is the protein found in wheat, barley and rye that triggers an autoimmune response in folks with celiac. Sometimes it is tricky to weed through people's intended good advice and get to the heart of an issue surrounding this disease. Read, read, read and ask, ask , ask is my best advice.

lisa

People's reactions can deppend on the form of the gluten they injest.

A McDonald's hamburger bun used to give me mild discomfort. The bread from Carraba's or Bonefish Grille I'd be lucky to make it to the bathroom sitting 10 feet away.

In a pinch I can have soy sauce...for me wheat products, even though they contain gluten, have a far different reaction than gluten contained in a product in a different manner.

Its not cut and dry.

There was an article that sour dough bread, even though it contains gluten does not effect someone with Celiacs if it is prepared the proper way. I have to dig up the article but something about the heating process of the alcohol causes the gluten not to be processed long enough until its passed the body.

Wheat products, by themselves, give me an immediate and short term reaction.

Other products which are more gluten infused without wheat give me a totally different reaction.

aikiducky Apprentice

To the original poster - when I get glutened, my most annoying symptoms usually subside after a few days. BUT 6 to 7 days from the glutening I get a flare up.

It used to really confuse me before I figured out that the pattern was always more or less the same. I used to think I had been glutened again. But apparently it's just the way my immune system works.

Also, the first year or so was very much ups and downs for me. It does take time.

Pauliina

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,218
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    MCAyr
    Newest Member
    MCAyr
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Okay, but the biopsy needs to be done during an active outbreak of dermatitis herpetiformis. So, if you can accomplish that without long term gluten exposure, that should work. How close together does do the dermatitis herpetiformis outbreaks occur in relation to the gluten exposure? It would be helpful to time that out in relation to your dermatology appointment for the biopsy. But one caution I would have about a dermatitis herpetiformis biopsy is that not every dermatologist knows how to do it correctly. The sample needs to be taken from tissue next to the bumps, not from the bumps themselves. But Wheatwacked is correct. A dermatitis herpetiformis diagnosis is definitive proof of celiac disease. However, only about 15% of celiacs develop dermatitis herpetiformis.
    • Wheatwacked
      That should answer your question about gluten.  Plus a dermatitis herpetiformis diagnosis is definative of celiac disease by itself.  Now you need to decide if you need to to pursue a diagnosis.  For your baby's health, I would assune both you and the baby have Celiac Disease. Eat gluten free and account for the fact that gluten free foods are not fortified.  Make sure to get lots of folate and Choline to prevent neurotube defects.   My son was diagnosed when he was weaned by biopsy in 1976.  Everyone called it just colicky, but his giant abdomen and green and yellow poop said otherwise.  Oh, and dispite general belief, they do not outgrow it.  If you are gluten free then your newborn will be gluten free and testing will not be positive for celiac disease, until the baby starts eating gluten and gets sick.  Why put him through that?  Gluten free household will give him the best health. Just before I started gluten free and one of the reasons I did was that I was lying in bed watching TV when I coughed.  My belly was bloated and I felt sick as a dog.  A bubble, looked like Bazooka bubble gum, popped out of my navel.  I am male, but apparently umbilical hernias are not uncommon in pregnancy.  Mine eventually resolved by itself. Low choline levels in pregnant women raise babies' risk for brain and spinal-cord defects, study shows  "From 180,000 pregnant women screened between 2003 and 2005, the researchers identified 80 whose pregnancies were affected by neural tube defects. Choline, an essential nutrient found in egg yolks, soy, wheat germ and meats, was the only nutrient measured whose blood levels were linked to risk of neural tube defects."  
    • MCAyr
      Appreciate the comment thanks yes seems my doc wants to go down the skin biopsy route for dermatitis herpetiformis as don't need to be on gluten-free apparently but we shall see what they say. 
    • trents
      Welcome to the community @MCAyr! One thing you need to know is that in order for celiac disease diagnostic testing to be valid, you must not have been on a gluten-free diet already. The first stage of celiac disease testing involves looking for the blood antibodies that are produced by the inflammation in the small bowel lining. Once you eliminate gluten, the antibodies begin to disappear and it takes weeks or months of being back on normal amounts of gluten for them to build up to detectable levels again.
    • MCAyr
      Hi currently being investigated for celiac; suspected dermatitis herpetiformis, low calcium and vit D, stomach discomfort and 2 episodes of awful stomach pain (docs think maybe triggered by pregnancy)  Went gluten-free for 5 weeks was feeling great then last week accidentally had some in a sweet! Followed by 2 days of absolute hell and excruciating stomach pain and cramping below right of belly button. Since then the really bad pain has gone, but I've had sore to touch above my belly button and think I can feel a lump, was painful for a couple of days to point I couldn't sleep on sides. Docs palpated few days before I could feel lump, and felt nothing.  Anyone had a hernia they didn't know about until their gluten reaction inflamed it? Or is this just another lovely gluten sensitivity symptom?  Many thanks 
×
×
  • Create New...