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Hypogammaglobulinemia - Anyone Else Been Diagnosed With This?


Lynayah

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Lynayah Enthusiast

Hypogammaglobulinemia - Has anyone else out there ever been diagnosed with this?

I took shots for this for years in my childhood and teen years. I was told years back I was misdiagnosed.

Now, as I look back, I wonder if the diagnosis was due to problems I was having with gluten.

Any thoughts out there?

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YoloGx Rookie

I was given gamma globulin as an infant. I had pneumonia at age 4 months plus stopped growing. Fortunately I was put in isolation and the doctor figured out it was my diet. He was originally from the Mayo clinic so knew something about celiac sprue--which I was then diagnosed with. Unfortunately I was put back on gluten at age 4 (we had already moved twice by then). I kept growing so they thought I was OK--however my health deteriorated rapidly... Nevertheless I think the gammaglobulin made me more resistant to certain diseases than I otherwise would have been--I never got the mumps or strep throat for instance... so I don't think it hurt me to get the gamma globulin, it probably helped instead.

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Lynayah Enthusiast
I was given gamma globulin as an infant. I had pneumonia at age 4 months plus stopped growing. Fortunately I was put in isolation and the doctor figured out it was my diet. He was originally from the Mayo clinic so knew something about celiac sprue--which I was then diagnosed with. Unfortunately I was put back on gluten at age 4 (we had already moved twice by then). I kept growing so they thought I was OK--however my health deteriorated rapidly... Nevertheless I think the gammaglobulin made me more resistant to certain diseases than I otherwise would have been--I never got the mumps or strep throat for instance... so I don't think it hurt me to get the gamma globulin, it probably helped instead.

Thanks for the reponse, Yolo. Were you diagnosed with Hypogammaglobulinemia, or were you put on the shots as a preventative measure against disease? Thank you, thank you. I hope more will respond to this.

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Lynayah Enthusiast
Thanks for the reponse, Yolo. Were you diagnosed with Hypogammaglobulinemia, or were you put on the shots as a preventative measure against disease? Thank you, thank you. I hope more will respond to this.

I want to add that I missed most of second grade to to my having reoccuring infections -- had to have a bedside teacher.

I am on a quest to find a link between this and gluten. I know there may very well be one.

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YoloGx Rookie
Thanks for the reponse, Yolo. Were you diagnosed with Hypogammaglobulinemia, or were you put on the shots as a preventative measure against disease? Thank you, thank you. I hope more will respond to this.

I honestly don't know. Perhaps I should ask my Mom and see if she remembers. My feeling is that they noticed my immune system was way down. Interestingly this was after the first "Green Run" in Washington state. They did a full release of radiation from the Hanford nuclear reactor into the atmosphere to see what would happen. The wind shifted and it went over Walla Walla (where I lived) as well as into Idaho. I am betting I wasn't the only infant that was adversely affected at the time. The pneumonia I had was considered serious enough for me to be in the hospital and put into isolation. However I also (as said) developed celiac disease as a result of being introduced to grains then too... and stopped growing.

Previously I was supposed to have been very healthy... In any case, I did not have to get more gamma globulin shots after I left the hospital. The change of diet seemed to be sufficient to cure me though for a time that winter I still was ill. The story goes that my mother used to keep me in the kitchen near the wood stove so I would stay warm. She also frequently used a kind of towel steam tent to help clear the mucous out of my nose and throat and used a syringe to clean out the guck. After I was reintroduced to grains at age 4, I got the chronic mucous back by age 5. It stayed with me until I went off all trace gluten--though going off most gluten by the time I was in my thirties greatly helped.

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Lynayah Enthusiast

Yolo,

Coincidentally, I also had pneumonia as a baby -- I was not 4 months old, but I was still in a crib. I know because my mother was a nurse, and she somehow talked the doctor into allowing her to set up an oxygen tent over the crib -- promising to watch me carefully, so I wouldn't have to go to the hospital. This story was told many times throughout the years.

I can remember very far back to early childhood, and I also have a memory of being in the tent, in the crib.

For the record: This was back in the 1950's.

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BlueTaelon Rookie

Shots? You poor thing! They haven't done those in years, I hear they were very painful. Both my kids have CVID and 1 receives Ig therapy. Now you have a choice of monthly IV which is done over several hours or weekly sub-q therapy at home. I wouldn't credit it for any long term benefit the Ig only lasts about 21 days in the body then you need another infusion.

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YoloGx Rookie

For me it was still 1949...

Glad to hear now they don't do shots.

Bea

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  • 2 years later...
worried grandma Newbie

Hypogammaglobulinemia - Has anyone else out there ever been diagnosed with this?

I took shots for this for years in my childhood and teen years. I was told years back I was misdiagnosed.

Now, as I look back, I wonder if the diagnosis was due to problems I was having with gluten.

Any thoughts out there?

My grandson who is 10 yrs old now has been diagnosed with this and has been in treatment for the past 3-4 years. I can remember the treatment name but he gets it once a week and they stick 3 or 4 little needles into his stomach and the medicine is slowly administered. It creates raised welts where the medicine is and then his body slowly absorbs this. He is having problems with migraines - have you had this?

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psawyer Proficient

This topic is almost three years old. The original poster, Lynayah, has not been on here in about six months.

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