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

Enterolab Results Are In


Evie4

Recommended Posts

Evie4 Apprentice

I haven't posted much here at Celiac, but I have learned so much from all of you--which brought me to getting myself tested through Enterolab and Kimball. I feel so lucky to have found this site that has led me to some answers--I appreicate all of you who take the time to post and share.

These results give me hope now that maybe my health will contionue improve as I lead a gluten free life and I can regain some of my spunk that I miss so much. My IBS has improved with gluten reduction over the past year and I'm hoping 100% elimination will bring even greater results. After 16 years, it would be like a miracle!

Here are my results, for anyone interested in seeing them or wanting to comment on them. At this point I'm convinced gluten causes a immune response and I should never eat gluten again! Oh...I added the parenthetical values along side of my reported values.

For those interested in testing. I was 95% gluten free for a year and 100% gluten free for a month before the test.

Evie

Gluten Sensitivity Stool and Gene Panel

Fecal Anti-gliadin IgA: 23 Units (<10)

Fecal Anti-tissue Transglutaminase IgA: 16 Units (<10)

Quantitative Microscopic Fecal Fat Score: 465 Units (<300)

Fecal Anti-casein (cow's milk) IgA: 15 Units (<10)

HLA-DQB1 Molecular analysis, Allele 1: 0301 (gluten sensitivity gene - from one parent)

HLA-DQB1 Molecular analysis, Allele 2: 0602 (gluten sensitivity gene - from other parent)

Serologic equivalent: HLA-DQ 3,1 (Subtype 7,6)

HLA-DQA1 Molecular analysis, Allele: 0501/0505 (from Kimball lab testing)

Egg, Yeast, and Soy Food Sensitivity Stool Panel

Fecal Anti-ovalbumin (chicken egg) IgA: 6 Units (<10)

Fecal Anti-saccharomyces cerevisiae (dietary yeast) IgA: 10 Units (<10)

Fecal Anti-soy IgA: 7 Units (<10)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ravenwoodglass Mentor

I am glad you got results that show you are on the right track. Now you can stop wondering and do the diet strictly along with eliminating casein and hopefully soon the fecal fat score will go down to normal levels. With your yeast score right at the cut off you might consider trying to reduce or cut that also. Happy healing.

Evie4 Apprentice
I am glad you got results that show you are on the right track. Now you can stop wondering and do the diet strictly along with eliminating casein and hopefully soon the fecal fat score will go down to normal levels. With your yeast score right at the cut off you might consider trying to reduce or cut that also. Happy healing.

Thanks for you comment. Interesting on the yeast, I rarely eat anything with yeast--it's really only been the gluten free bread the past year and not a whole lot of it. I'll avoid that for now. I'm so glad I did this testing and didn't procrastinate about it. Again, I'm so grateful to the board and you posters!

nora-n Rookie

Are you aware of the fact that the Kimball test proves you have half a celiac gene?

You officially have half a DQ2!

(it is in the alpha chain of your DQ7. But not all DQ7 do have this) (to read more, go to the HLA DQ page on wikipedia, and the HLA DR page too)

You might want to notify Enterolab, I wish they informed patients that they most likely do have half a celiac gene when they have DQ7, and not just call it gluten sensitive. They miss a lot of cleiacs that way. There have been several postings about that here before.

There have even been DQ7/DQ2,2 positive people here where Enterolab has not bothered to telle them that. The 05* alpha chain and the 2,2 beta chain together are the official 2,5 celiac gene in trans.

nora

Evie4 Apprentice
Are you aware of the fact that the Kimball test proves you have half a celiac gene?

You officially have half a DQ2!

(it is in the alpha chain of your DQ7. But not all DQ7 do have this) (to read more, go to the HLA DQ page on wikipedia, and the HLA DR page too)

You might want to notify Enterolab, I wish they informed patients that they most likely do have half a celiac gene when they have DQ7, and not just call it gluten sensitive. They miss a lot of cleiacs that way. There have been several postings about that here before.

There have even been DQ7/DQ2,2 positive people here where Enterolab has not bothered to telle them that. The 05* alpha chain and the 2,2 beta chain together are the official 2,5 celiac gene in trans.

nora

Thanks for pointing that out Nora. Yes, I did test with Kimball for the alpha (just incase) there was something there, and sure enough! I indicated the *05 to Enterolab in the voluntary survery.

I understand that the alleles DQA1 *0501/DQB1 *0301 (that I possess) make DQ7 (DQ7.5) So, this means the 0501 reported by Kimball as the 1/2 DQ2 completes this gene or(?) Kimball said *05 raised the risk about 3% (I've read 5% of celiacs in one study were solely 1/2 DQ2 *05). What does DQ7 mean in terms of risk--do you know? I couldn't find any numbers. I'm also curious now with these 3 alleles how this is expressed in DQ(?) DQ2/DQ7 (?) 0602 excluded?

Evie

nora-n Rookie

Hi, about 5% of celiacs have half a gene, maybe like you said 5% have half the DQ2, 05*.

In your case this does not make up anything else, since you do not have the DQ2,2.

Maybe you can call yourself DQ7,5, DQ6 and half a DQ2? What would you prefer?

I am still a bit upset that enterolab does not point that out, that DQ7 may be half DQ2, and thus have a celiac gene.

There are other genes that predispose towards celiac, like the Myo9b and another thing I forgot, DQ is just 40%. The greatest risk is still having a celiac relative.

nora

nora-n Rookie

By the way, I have been reading here for some years, and always wondered where all the half genes were.

Glad to have found you.

Just proves they did not est for them before, and that enterolab did not tell people that they might have half the gene (with DQ7) since most DQ7 are 7,5


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Evie4 Apprentice
There are other genes that predispose towards celiac, like the Myo9b and another thing I forgot, DQ is just 40%. The greatest risk is still having a celiac relative.

nora

It would be nice if my immediate family would be tested, there certainly are indicators...but for the most part there is silence to my news, so that part I'm not likely to find out unfortunately. Not unless any of my siblings (or their children) symptoms get progressively worse like mine did and they get desperate for an answer.

It does seem, with the reporting of "gluten sensitivity genes" that Enterolab would make that acknowledgement if/when they know the association with *05 and DQ7 and relay the risk associated. Another case of multiple info sources payoff! Thanks for the info. Thank heavens for the internet!

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,202
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Judy Wysocki
    Newest Member
    Judy Wysocki
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Scott Adams
      They may want to also eliminate other possible causes for your symptoms/issues and are doing additional tests.  Here is info about blood tests for celiac disease--if positive an endoscopy where biopsies of your intestinal villi are taken to confirm is the typical follow up.    
    • Scott Adams
      In the Europe the new protocol for making a celiac disease diagnosis in children is if their tTg-IgA (tissue transglutaminase IgA) levels are 10 times or above the positive level for celiac disease--and you are above that level. According to the latest research, if the blood test results are at certain high levels that range between 5-10 times the reference range for a positive celiac disease diagnosis, it may not be necessary to confirm the results using an endoscopy/biopsy: Blood Test Alone Can Diagnose Celiac Disease in Most Children and Adults TGA-IgA at or Above Five Times Normal Limit in Kids Indicates Celiac Disease in Nearly All Cases No More Biopsies to Diagnose Celiac Disease in Children! May I ask why you've had so many past tTg-IgA tests done, and many of them seem to have been done 3 times during short time intervals?    
    • trents
      @JettaGirl, "Coeliac" is the British spelling of "celiac". Same disease. 
    • JettaGirl
      This may sound ridiculous but is this supposed to say Celiacs? I looked up Coeliacs because you never know, there’s a lot of diseases related to a disease that they come up with similar names for. It’s probably meant to say Celiacs but I just wanted to confirm.
    • JoJo0611
      I was told it was to see how much damage has been caused. But just told CT with contrast not any other name for it. 
×
×
  • 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.