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

I Need Verification If Correctly Tested For celiac disease


nb-canada

Recommended Posts

nb-canada Apprentice

It has been a year since my 35 year old son was positively diagnosed with celiac disease - blood test, biopsy & DH was positive. I unfortunately had negative tests. I have been gluten-free for 7 months & feel great except for fatique & the occassional episode of accidental glutening. In my opinion, I have had celiac disease most of my life.

My question - did I get the proper blood testing? My family doctor says it was the best test and that it was sent to a lab in Toronto. I have a copy of the results and they were from another hospital in my province - therefore I don't have much faith in the results. :(

The test results are -

- Immunoglobulin IgG 6.84 (4.54 - 14.99 g/L)

- Immunoglobulin IgA 1.23 (0.32 - 3.40 g/L)

- Immunoglobulin IgM 3.83 (0.15 - 2.27 g/L)

As you can see the only test not normal is the IgM. But as far as I am concerned these tests are not the best tests for celiac disease. What do you think?

Also ony 3 samples from my endoscopy were biopsied. Results - small intestinal mucosa with mild lymphocytic infiltration; no pathological changes of celiac disease is identified.

I don't have a lot of faith in the GI either because his first comments to me were - "you are too fat to have celiac disease" and "you are too old". I should have walked out then because I think the whole thing was a waste of time. We have to educate these doctors!

Thanks in advance for your opinions! :D


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Gerri Explorer
It has been a year since my 35 year old son was positively diagnosed with celiac disease - blood test, biopsy & DH was positive. I unfortunately had negative tests. I have been gluten-free for 7 months & feel great except for fatique & the occassional episode of accidental glutening. In my opinion, I have had celiac disease most of my life.

My question - did I get the proper blood testing? My family doctor says it was the best test and that it was sent to a lab in Toronto. I have a copy of the results and they were from another hospital in my province - therefore I don't have much faith in the results. :(

The test results are -

- Immunoglobulin IgG 6.84 (4.54 - 14.99 g/L)

- Immunoglobulin IgA 1.23 (0.32 - 3.40 g/L)

- Immunoglobulin IgM 3.83 (0.15 - 2.27 g/L)

As you can see the only test not normal is the IgM. But as far as I am concerned these tests are not the best tests for celiac disease. What do you think?

Also ony 3 samples from my endoscopy were biopsied. Results - small intestinal mucosa with mild lymphocytic infiltration; no pathological changes of celiac disease is identified.

I don't have a lot of faith in the GI either because his first comments to me were - "you are too fat to have celiac disease" and "you are too old". I should have walked out then because I think the whole thing was a waste of time. We have to educate these doctors!

Thanks in advance for your opinions! :D

I didn't get to see my results. I was told to go on a gluten free diet indefinitely. Three weeks later and after some blood was done, I seen my GASTRO, she said that there was possible chance I was Celiac, as my blood work showed a great improvement. After having an endoscopy (no results yet). Gastro said I might only be gluten intolerant and what I have read that many gluten intolerant change to celiac. Blood test and endoscopy don't always confirm celiac.

I already had a doctor tell me that he would have diagnosed me with Celiac, without the endoscopy. As he was at Urgent care clinic and not family doctor, I don't know if that counts. Celiac you can gain weight, be constipated all the time. It is also know fact that biopies only taken from very small section on small intestine, and very frequently not taken from the damage area. Corn, gluten cause celiac problems different parts of the small intestine. I have major problems with corn, and products made with corn, as well.

If you feel better following a gluten free diet, you have your answer. I could not handle one more day of eating gluten, corn, and have really restricted my diet from these things, and feel much better. I believe I have been Celiac, and had signs since I was a toddler, and now 54. No one can pay me to go back on gluten or corn, no way no how.

I see you live in Canada (NB), I am in ON.

Hugs

Gerri

cat3883 Explorer

It looks like you werent tested for TTG whatever that is. The other bloodwork that you you had came back normal for me. The TTG for me was at 59 with the normal range of 0-19. Anything over 30 shows strong positive. My GI then did the genetic test and I came back positive for both genes. My biopsy is this Wednesday. I cannot go gluten free until then and I cant wait. The doc knows I have celiac even before the biopsy. He is doing it just to see where I am at before I begin my new lifestyle. I am so fortunate to have the right Doc. Good luck to you.

Nancym Enthusiast

Blood tests are negative sometimes when there isn't total villious atrophy. Also, blood tests don't tell you anything about gluten sensitivity without villious atrophy. For that, you'd need a test like Enterolab.com does.

nora-n Rookie

Those are not celiac tests.

But, when testing for celiac, (ttg IgA ans antigliadin IgA and endomysium abs), they also run the total IgA just to check if the tests I listed are valid. In case of selesctive IgA deficiency (about 10% of the population have that) they ahve to run the IgG versions of those tests.

Again, they did not run any celaic tests on you. Shame on them. go back and inform them they did not run any celiac tests on you, just the rutine IgA test to see if the celiac tests that were not done, are valid.....I hope they do not do this stupid testing on all patients they think they are testing for celiac.

About the lymphocytic infiltration:

Some places will diagnose you with celiac with increased intraepitelial lymphocytes together with symptoms etc. Go find Dr. Lewey's website, there he explains how many of them are normal per villi tip and how many are abnormal. I have read in Don Wiss's postings on some other forums that some places will diagnose you toghether with some other info that points to celiac if you ask for a second opinion on the slide. I think it was the U of Maryland. Dr. Lewey is at www.thefooddoc.com

nora

  • 4 months later...
nb-canada Apprentice
About the lymphocytic infiltration:

Some places will diagnose you with celiac with increased intraepitelial lymphocytes together with symptoms etc. Go find Dr. Lewey's website, there he explains how many of them are normal per villi tip and how many are abnormal. I have read in Don Wiss's postings on some other forums that some places will diagnose you toghether with some other info that points to celiac if you ask for a second opinion on the slide. I think it was the U of Maryland. Dr. Lewey is at www.thefooddoc.com

nora

Thanks Nora. I just seen your post today and I really appreciate your response. I checked out Dr. Lewey's site. Very interesting. I think I may print out the info and show it to my doctor. It does seem that my biopsy results could mean celiac especially with the results of a gluten free diet and my son's definite diagnosis. My family doctor has given me a diagnosis of Gluten Intolerant but it would be nice to have the Celiac diagnosis so I could claim the expenses on my Income Tax. Do you know how long a slide is kept in the lab? It would be nice to get a second opinion.

I have been diagnosed with Hypo Thyroid and had Shinges (for 5th time) since this post. Besides that I am feeling great....still gluten free :).

tarnalberry Community Regular

(EDIT: doesn't apply to this thread, as the below is US, not Canadian, and I was a US-centric dork for not paying more attention earlier (which you'd think I wouldn't be, living all of three hours from Canada, but no... /facepalm :)). but I'll leave here for other reference use.)

you can only deduct the extra expenses of the cost of gluten free foods (like, how much more a loaf of gluten-free bread costs than equivalent regular bread) IF you can file medical deductions, meaning your medical expenses total 7.5% of your adjusted gross income. if your adjusted gross income is $40k, that means you have to document $3k of post insurance medical expenses. additionally, many accountants note that taking a deduction for the cost of food is likely to set you up for an audit, because that is a grey area - and it can be argued whether or not specialty products are necessary or a luxury.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



maile Newbie
(just want to clarify the tax thing...)

you can only deduct the extra expenses of the cost of gluten free foods (like, how much more a loaf of gluten-free bread costs than equivalent regular bread) IF you can file medical deductions, meaning your medical expenses total 7.5% of your adjusted gross income. if your adjusted gross income is $40k, that means you have to document $3k of post insurance medical expenses. additionally, many accountants note that taking a deduction for the cost of food is likely to set you up for an audit, because that is a grey area - and it can be argued whether or not specialty products are necessary or a luxury.

just a note, tarnalberry, your information is for US patients (eta, that sounded a little snippy, sorry tarnalberry, not my intention :blink: ), nb-canada is Canadian and the rules are somewhat different due to differing tax regimes. In Canada medical expenses:

Medical expenses for the taxpayer, the taxpayer's spouse or common-law partner, and dependent children under 18 are claimed on line 330 of the federal tax return. Only expenses in excess of the lesser of $1,925 (federal, for 2007) or 3% of net income can be claimed. The lowest tax rate is applied to the medical expenses to determine the amount of the tax credit.

the specifics on claiming for Celiac (for which you do require an official diagnosis) can be found here: Open Original Shared Link

tarnalberry Community Regular

ooo! thanks! I'm apparently a little slow this morning. :D

curiousgeorge Rookie

I sent you a PM.

Those are not celaic tests by any stretch. I really hope you didn't pay for them :(

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,016
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Chloelouise04
    Newest Member
    Chloelouise04
    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)

  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Jmartes71
      Im so frustrated and still getting the run around trying to reprove my celiac disease which my past primary ignored for 25 years.I understand that theres a ray of medical that doctors are limited too but not listening and telling the patient ( me) that im not as sensitive as I think and NOT celiac!Correction Mr white coat its not what I think but for cause and affect and past test that are not sticking in my medical records.I get sick violently with foods consumed, not eating the foods will show Im fabulous. After many blood draws and going through doctors I have the HLA- DQ2 positive which I read in a study that Iran conducted that the severity in celiac is in that gene.Im glutenfree and dealing with related issues which core issue of celiac isn't addressed. My skin, right eye, left leg diagestive issues affected. I have high blood pressure because im in pain.Im waisting my time on trying to reprove that Im celiac which is not a disease I want, but unfortunately have.It  has taken over my life personally and professionally. How do I stop getting medically gaslight and get the help needed to bounce back if I ever do bounce back to normal? I thought I was in good care with " celiac specialist " but in her eyes Im good.Im NOT.Sibo positive, IBS, Chronic Fatigue just to name a few and its all related to what I like to call a ghost disease ( celiac) since doctors don't seem to take it seriously. 
    • trents
      @Martha Mitchell, your reaction to the lens implant with gluten sounds like it could be an allergic reaction rather than a celiac reaction. It is possible for a celiac to be also allergic to gluten as it is a protein component in wheat, barley and rye.
    • JoJo0611
    • Martha Mitchell
      Scott I also have different symptoms than most people. It affects me bad. Stomach ache, headache, nauseous, heart racing, whole body shaking, can't walk then my throat starts to close. It attacks my nervous system. The only thing that saves me is a 1/2 of Xanax...it calms down my nervous system 
    • Martha Mitchell
      Scott Adams. I was dealing with a DR that didn't care about me being celiac. I repeatedly told him that I was celiac and is everything gluten-free. He put an acrylic lens from j&j. I called the company to ask about gluten and was told yes that the acrylic they use has gluten....then they back tracked immediately and stopped talking to me. The Dr didn't care that I was having issues. It took me 6 months and a lot of sickness to get it removed.... which can only happen within 6 months. The Dr that took it out said that it was fused and that's why I lost vision. If they would have removed it right away everything would be fine. He put in a silicone one that was gluten-free and I've had no issues at all in the other eye. Do not do acrylic!
×
×
  • 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.