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

Stopping My Vegan Diet Hurt Recovery?


wschmucks

Recommended Posts

wschmucks Contributor

Hey Guys,

I have been Vegan for the past 10 months now and I really have enjoyed it although with the new gluten free diet it has been very hard. I keep thinking that I'm getting glutened accidentally and Soy is hard on digestion so I was thinking about starting to eat some fish a few times a week and maybe eggs too. I am not allergic to eggs.

Would adding these new foods that my body isnt used to any more cause problems with my recovery? I have been gluten free for only 5 weeks now with varied results, and I've been vegan for just under a year. Any thoughts?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ShayFL Enthusiast

I was vegan for a few years and when a Chinese doctor told me I needed to eat red meat, I was surprised that it was NO problem at all for my body to digest a steak. None. All you can do is try it and see if it agrees with you. You could take a gluten-free digestive enzyme with it if you feel you might need help.

AndreaB Contributor

After being vegan for 3 years I had no problem introducing meat/eggs back into my diet.

As Shay said, you could always get some enzymes to help if you need to. Some I was on are the papaya ones....forget the name but I can look it up if interested.

wschmucks Contributor

Thanks guys, that's helpful to know. Would it be GOOD for recovery to start eating some meat/ fish? If it really would help then I will probably abandon my vegan ways, at least for a while. I will do anything to help with my recovery, just not sure what will really help.

Janessa Rookie

you have not been gluten free and vegan very long, depending on your reasons to be vegan you may want to stick it out a little longer before you decide.

vegiac.com is for vegetarian and vegan celiacs

google gluten free goddess to find a great blog full of delicious recipes

There are also lots of great vegan gluten free cookbooks (that I can't remember the names right now) check amazon

wschmucks Contributor

Thanks for the website info.

I am Vegan for health reason-- thats why i want to know if it will be healthier for me to not be vegan right now, while I am recovering. I can never see myself permenently being a meat eater, but I wanted to know if it might help my body get what it needs right now. It also gives me a pure product-- meaning it can be broiled plain and i dont have to stress out trying to figure out if it made me sick.

Thanks for your help.

ShayFL Enthusiast

There are people and research on both sides of the camp. I went vegan for health reasons as well....but found myself sicker and sicker. I became anemic. I need a small amount of meat in my diet everyday. I feel better.

Healthy is whatever foods make YOU healthy.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



AndreaB Contributor

Again I agree with Shay.

Some people do well vegan, others don't.

My family actually developed more health problems. Basically, you need some animal protein to help move toxins out of the body. If we had stayed on with at least eggs we may not have gotten as bad.

ShayFL Enthusiast

I made a really good friend years ago when I was vegan. She was vegan as well and believed with all her heart and soul that vegan was the healthiest way to eat. And she seemed to do o.k. vegan for a little over a year, then she got pregnant. I can still remember stopping by to drop some homemade almond milk off. I went to put it in the refridgerator and there was a huge hunk of HAM in her ice box!!! When I asked her about it, she said....I am craving meat and I cant get enough.

Vegan doesnt work for everyone, so listen to your body. It knows best.

givenupgluten Explorer

I think being vegan is a very personal choice and not one that everyone is able to make and commit to long term. That being said, I am vegan and have been for about 10-11 months. It's been the most rewarding choice I've ever made, and I feel better (less mood swings, better physical shape, and mentally more 'clear') than I ever had. When I found out about the gluten intolerance, I was terrified of trying to read MORE labels than I already do and restrict my diet even moreso.

I found though, that many of the vegan cookbooks I already had included gluten-free options as well. Once I gained a little knowledge about being gluten-free, I was able to convert most of the other recipes as well. My two favorite cookbooks for these two lifestyles are Veganomicon and Gluten Free Vegan. The first, has some gluten free options..and I've been able to convert my fav's to gluten free, even if they arent' listed as so in the book. While living this 'lifestyle' can be challenging, I also welcome that challenge and find that I eat foods I would NEVER have even known about a yr ago.

I think you have to do what's best for you, but know that it IS possible to do both..if you choose to. There is actually a pretty decent population of vegan celiacs - and like the other poster said 'vegiac.com' is a great forum to utilize. I find that if a restaurant has gluten free options, they also have vegetarian options..and vice versa. If you have a supportive family/friends..it makes the transition even easier! I would recommend seeing a nutritionist/RD before making any changes...someone who specializes in vegetarian diets (doesnt mean THEY are actually vegetarians) and celiacs. This helps tremendously as well!

spunky Contributor

This is something I've been trying to figure out forever... or it seems like it, actually, it's only been just under 3 years I've been trying to understand this.

Seems my problems were triggered by the vegan diet... or possibly, when I think back, some subtle symptoms when I was a vegetarian (eggs, cheese, and some fish) for a few years before turning full-blown vegan. After becoming vegan, my gut started into daily turmoil... soon after that I switched to the McDougall diet, which is basically whole foods, vegan, and no oil. My symptoms seemed to get even worse, very quickly... but McDougall and his followers say this is adjustment to all the fiber, detox, etc., etc., and my life was busy so I just dismissed it out of my mind. After over 10 years on the diet, I had to face the situation and get out of denial: THat, even though I was eating what I believed to be the healthiest diet on the planet, and believed to be morally superior to meat-eating, I had to face up to the fact that I was sicker than a dog, every single day, and in denial about that and working very hard to get through each and every work day (which I could only do because I am in a private office next to an infrequently used restroom... still had to carry extra underwear around, though) and working even harder to hide my chronic condition from my husband... I became terrified I was dying of something, in spite of having been on the "healthiest diet on the planet" for around a decade. By the time I realized what was happening to me, I thought it was probably too late for me to get any help, that it must be killing me by that time... I began searching desperately for answers and decided, after much research, to try cutting out gluten to see what would happen.

After a rough and rocky first six months, I realized I had celiac disease and finally told all of this to my husband... it was a relief to not be hiding so much anymore... thankfully, he accepted all that I told him and it made sense to him.

Anyway, my point... after going all those years without meat, I wondered if my recovery might go quicker with meat... I asked around on the McDougall message boards about this, but of course none of them believed meat was helpful... so, once again, on my own, I decided maybe I needed to try.

I have to say my gut was at an all-time level of sensitivity, and I found myself very reactive to eggs for months and months... most meats didn't bother me, but sometimes certain ones did. I didn't know if this was from being vegan so long or part of gluten recovery... I just followed my instincts, since there seems to be no one on this planet that really knows how each individual must eat to be healthy.

So, after on and off trials over many months... I now eat shrimp, other fish, beef, pork, eggs (still can't eat them more than two or three times a week without some mild intestinal symptoms), and even ice cream and butter and some types of cheese... I did't have the nerve to try dairy prodcuts for a long time. The ones i've tried seem to not bother me at all... I don't drink milk, so I've never bought liquid milk... I did try goat milk one time and it gave me terrible symptoms. So I still do the vegan milk substitutes, Almond milk or hemp milk. But I eat ice cream with real milk and have no problems from it.

Anyway... sorry this is getting long, but I know your struggle and it seems we are all different and nobody really has the answer. I wish I didn't need animal products, but after slowly, on and off, carefully introducing them into my diet during my near-3 years gluten free... I have to say, I am feeling much better than I can remember for years and years. I still don't know IF it's the addition of the animal products or just the passage of time gluten free... and I don't know WHO could even pretend to know. I don't like the idea of eating animals...but when I feel so much better... I just do whatever I need to do, and for now, that includes lots of meats, fish, some eggs and a few dairy products.

I guess that makes me a meat-eater... fwhether I wanna be or not... but it feels good to feel good... so I do.

Good luck figuring this out... it seems you are the ONLY person who can know what you need!

BRUMI1968 Collaborator

Typically sufferers of Celiac are very low on B12, which is only found in animals...eggs and fish would both have B12 (though not as much as red meat).

I was a vegan for several years; now eat eggs and some fish - it might help to take an enzyme that has HCI in it, or drink a bit of RAW Apple Cider Vinegar in water five minutes before eating. This will increase your stomach acid, which you'll need nice and acidic to digest the meat and to get the B12.

If you're getting shots of B12, the meat would be less important. There are other things there, though too, like tryptophan and specific amino acids - all of which are important facets of the potential human diet.

raisin Enthusiast

I am a happy ex-vegan celiac. ;) Was in almost exactly the same boat as you.

Fish, I have had many.. many problems digesting, but, I don't know why. Eggs are great but eating very many or very often tends to make people feel awful.

Slightly less popular, vegan-friendly alternatives;

Turkey is a great white meat, if you get free-range antibiotic-free organic stuff, it's easy to find gluten-free, uncured, nitrite-free, and preservative-minimal. Ostrich is a very health meat, when organic, supposedly one of the best. :D For red meat, Kosher beef is a good place to start, but Buffalo is even better. They cannot be given hormones, they must be free-range and grass fed, etc. The meat is much more nutritious and lean than cow or pork.

I was vegan for health reasons, but found out that vegans have a significantly shorter life expectancy. Ironic. I feel funny eating meat, after being vegan for years.. but I am so much healthier now, and even get weak again when I try to eat vegan. Just taking B12 vitamins did not help the way eating meat does.

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. - Jmartes71 replied to Jmartes71's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      20

      My only proof

    2. - knitty kitty replied to Scott Adams's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      44

      Supplements for those Diagnosed with Celiac Disease

    3. - knitty kitty replied to Jmartes71's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      20

      My only proof

    4. - Scott Adams commented on Scott Adams's article in Gluten-Free Grains and Flours
      18

      Cricket Flour Makes Really Good Gluten-Free Bread


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,542
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    CC324
    Newest Member
    CC324
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):



  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):


  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Jmartes71
      Thus has got to STOP , medical bit believing us! I literally went through 31 years thinking it was just a food allergy as its downplayed by medical if THEY weren't the ones who diagnosed us! Im positive for HLA-DQ2 which is first celiac patient per Iran and Turkey. Here in the States especially in Cali its why do you feel that way? Why do you think your celiac? Your not eating gluten so its something else.Medical caused me depression. I thought I was safe with my former pcp for 25 years considering i thought everything I went through and going through will be available when I get fired again for health. Health not write-ups my health always come back when you're better.Im not and being tossed away at no fault to my own other than shitty genes.I was denied disability because person said he didn't know how to classify me! I said Im celiac, i have ibs, hernia, sciatica, high blood pressure, in constant pain have skin and eye issues and menopause intensified everything. With that my celiac nightmare began to reprove my disregarded disease to a bunch of clowns who think they are my careteam when they said I didn't have...I feel Im still breathing so I can fight this so no body else has to deal with this nightmare. Starting over with " new care team" and waisting more time on why I think I am when diagnosed in 1994 before food eliminated from my diet. P.s everything i went through I did write to medical board, so pretty sure I will continue to have a hard time.
    • knitty kitty
      @Scatterbrain, Thiamine Vitamin B1 and amino acid Taurine work together.  Our bodies can make Taurine from meats consumed.  Our bodies cannot make Thiamine and must consume thiamine from food.  Meat is the best source of B vitamins like Thiamine.   Vegetarians may not make sufficient taurine since they don't eat meat sources of taurine.  Seaweed is the best vegetarian source of taurine. Vegetarians may not consume sufficient Thiamine since few veggies are good sources.  Whole grains, legumes, and nuts and seeds contain thiamine.  Many of these sources can be hard to digest and absorb for people with Celiac disease.   You may find taking the forms of thiamine called Benfotiamine or TTFD (tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide) and a B Complex will give the benefits you're looking for better than taurine alone.  
    • knitty kitty
      @Jmartes71, I went to Doterra's site and had a look around.  The Doterra TerraZyme supplement really jumped out at me.  Since we, as Celiacs, often have digestive problems, I looked at the ingredients.  The majority of the enzymes in this supplement are made using black mold, Aspergillus!  Other enzymes are made by yeast Saccharomyces!  Considering the fact that Celiac often have permeable intestines (leaky gut syndrome), I would be very hesitant to take a product like this.  Although there may not be live black mold or yeast in the product, the enzymes may still cause an immune system response which would definitely cause inflammation throughout the body.   Skin, eyes, and intestines are all made from the same basic type of cells.  Your skin on the outside and eyes can reflect how irritated the intestines are on the inside.  Our skin, eyes, and intestines all need the same vitamins and nutrients to be healthy:  Vitamin A, Niacin B3 and Tryptophan, Riboflavin B2, Biotin B7, Vitamin C, and Omega Threes.  Remember that the eight B vitamins work together.  Just taking high doses of just one, vitamin like B12, can cause a deficiency in the others.  Taking high doses of B12 can mask a Folate B9 deficiency.  If you take B12, please take a B Complex, too.  Thiamine B1 can be taken in high doses safely without toxicity.  Thiamine is needed by itself to produce energy so every cell in the body can function, but Thiamine also works with the other B vitamins to make life sustaining enzymes and digestive enzymes.  Deficiencies in either Niacin, Vitamin C, or Thiamine can cause digestive problems resulting in Pellagra, Scurvy, and Gastrointestinal Beriberi.   If you change your diet, you will change your intestinal microbiome.  Following the Autoimmune Protocol Diet, a Paleo diet, will starve out SIBO bacteria.  Thiamine keeps bacteria in check so they don't get out of control as in SIBO.  Thiamine also keeps MOLDS and Yeasts from overgrowth.   Menopause symptoms and menstrual irregularities are symptomatic of low Vitamin D.   Doctors are not as knowledgeable about malnutrition as we need them to be.  A nutritionist or dietician would be more helpful.   Take control of your diet and nutrition.  Quit looking for a pill that's going to make you feel better overnight.  The Celiac journey is a marathon, not a sprint.   "Let food be your medicine, and let medicine be your food."
    • RUKen
      The Lindt (Lindor) dairy-free oat milk truffles are definitely gluten-free, and (last time I checked) so are the white chocolate truffles and the mint chocolate truffles. 
    • lmemsm
      I've used magnesium taurinate and magnesium taurate vitamins.  Didn't notice much of a difference when I used them.
×
×
  • 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.