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Two Year Old Positive Blood Test


nmlove

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nmlove Contributor

My son (4 years) was diagnosed with celiacs nearly three weeks ago (positive blood and endoscopy). And we just got the news that my 2 year old's bloodwork is positive. On one hand, it'll sure help with cross-contamination in the kitchen but at the expense of him having this disease? -sigh-

I guess gluten-free for my littlest one for quite awhile (nearly 5 months old and still exclusively breastfeeding). Anyone in same boat? When did you eventually introduce gluten? At some point she'll have to.


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taweavmo3 Enthusiast

At least you are finding out early, he can heal quickly and avoid any long term damage.

I have one dd who is positive, but my other three children are also gluten intolerant. My yougest had reflux at birth, and I had to cut out gluten and dairy while breastfeeding. I kept her off gluten, b/c I wanted her most important developmental years to be disease free. My oldest daughter, who was really sick before diagnosed at age 3, still has some lingering language/processing issues, and took a long time to heal.

My youngest is 3 years old now, she has had a bit of gluten at grandma's, or a couple of times when we were out....and she never does well with it. She gets extremely irritable, throws tantrums, dark circles under her eyes, constipation, pale stools, etc. I have resigned myself to the fact that all of my kids need to be gluten free for life, period. I can't live through a gluten challenge with them...they wouldn't last more than a few days, and I would be going batty from all the meltdowns!

That's our story...everyone is different, and it is such a personal decision to make. It might be worth keeping your youngest off gluten for the first 2-3 years, since they are such crucial developmental years. Hope that helps some!

nmlove Contributor
At least you are finding out early, he can heal quickly and avoid any long term damage.

That's our story...everyone is different, and it is such a personal decision to make. It might be worth keeping your youngest off gluten for the first 2-3 years, since they are such crucial developmental years. Hope that helps some!

Yes, I am glad we are finding out early. It's kind of funny though. I was doing pretty well with everything but after I got the call last night I felt down so I guess somewhere deep down I'm not done grieving. It'll pass, I know.

And yes, that's exactly why I've decided to keep my daughter gluten free for a few years. Not to risk her development. Because now I have passing thoughts of what if with my boys and wonder if it messed anything up. Plus, then she'll be old enough that if it causes something physical that I can't see, she'll be able to tell me.

Thanks for your input!

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