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

How Long After Ingesting Do Symptoms Appear?


lisaloo

Recommended Posts

lisaloo Newbie

I have CFS and wonder if I have Celiac disease. Tests show neg but I don't eat enough bad foods before testing to cause a positive. My allergy tests are fine.

Sometimes I eat bread or pasta, don't feel tired after. Sometimes, 1-2 days later I feel more tired.

I never have diaharrea or the usual symptoms.

Is this normal?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



T.H. Community Regular

Sounds like it could be, or it could be allergies, or intolerances or sensitivities that don't show up on allergy tests. Did you have prick test allergy tests or blood test ones? But a delayed reaction is how gluten hits my dad. Sensitivities tend to hit later, too.

I'll share my symptoms for comparison, see if they help?

I was tired a lot, depressed often, caught little colds and such fairly often, had no diarrhea or any gut symptoms, I tested negative for food allergies on prick tests. When I would up my gluten intake - trying to eat healthy, so I'd have more pasta - I would feel a bit more tired a few days later, maybe, but usually didn't even notice that much.

Once I was diagnosed positive for celiac disease, it didn't help a lot. I was worse, actually, once I went gluten free. Then my GI doc told me that people with the gene to get celiac disease, even if it hadn't triggered, are much more prone to food allergies, and sensitivities, and intolerances. So he tested me with a blood test, and it came back positive for quite a few foods. However, he also told me that they weren't completely accurate because - as you've noticed - you have to have eaten enough of the food beforehand to make it an accurate test. And they tell you nothing about foods that you are intolerant to, or sensitive to.

So, I've gone off a ton of foods since my diagnosis (it's only been 5 months now). I kept a food log, kept to a small list of foods and wrote down all the ingredients and my reactions, etc... Picked out any foods that seemed like they had a pattern and dropped 'em. Which happened quickly. Once I went off foods, suddenly, the other reactions were spaced out, instead of my feeling miserable all the time.

And all the symptoms disappeared. Not tired all the time, no depression...even physical problems like carpal tunnel and back aches are simply gone.

I know a lot of people who test positive for food issues OR celiac disease have been previously diagnosed with CFS, so that's pretty normal as well. Frustrating as heck, but normal.

I wish you good luck in finding out what's going on with your body! Best wishes.

I have CFS and wonder if I have Celiac disease. Tests show neg but I don't eat enough bad foods before testing to cause a positive. My allergy tests are fine.

Sometimes I eat bread or pasta, don't feel tired after. Sometimes, 1-2 days later I feel more tired.

I never have diaharrea or the usual symptoms.

Is this normal?

lisaloo Newbie

Sounds like it could be, or it could be allergies, or intolerances or sensitivities that don't show up on allergy tests. Did you have prick test allergy tests or blood test ones? But a delayed reaction is how gluten hits my dad. Sensitivities tend to hit later, too.

I'll share my symptoms for comparison, see if they help?

I was tired a lot, depressed often, caught little colds and such fairly often, had no diarrhea or any gut symptoms, I tested negative for food allergies on prick tests. When I would up my gluten intake - trying to eat healthy, so I'd have more pasta - I would feel a bit more tired a few days later, maybe, but usually didn't even notice that much.

Once I was diagnosed positive for celiac disease, it didn't help a lot. I was worse, actually, once I went gluten free. Then my GI doc told me that people with the gene to get celiac disease, even if it hadn't triggered, are much more prone to food allergies, and sensitivities, and intolerances. So he tested me with a blood test, and it came back positive for quite a few foods. However, he also told me that they weren't completely accurate because - as you've noticed - you have to have eaten enough of the food beforehand to make it an accurate test. And they tell you nothing about foods that you are intolerant to, or sensitive to.

So, I've gone off a ton of foods since my diagnosis (it's only been 5 months now). I kept a food log, kept to a small list of foods and wrote down all the ingredients and my reactions, etc... Picked out any foods that seemed like they had a pattern and dropped 'em. Which happened quickly. Once I went off foods, suddenly, the other reactions were spaced out, instead of my feeling miserable all the time.

And all the symptoms disappeared. Not tired all the time, no depression...even physical problems like carpal tunnel and back aches are simply gone.

I know a lot of people who test positive for food issues OR celiac disease have been previously diagnosed with CFS, so that's pretty normal as well. Frustrating as heck, but normal.

I wish you good luck in finding out what's going on with your body! Best wishes.

lisaloo Newbie

Thanks TH.

I was tested for celiac disease via the blood test.

I was tested for gluten allergies via prick tests, and blood tests, both immediate and delayed, no issues. I did eat gluten the weak before the blood allergy tests.

I wonder why you felt worse after going gluten free for awhile. That's interesting.

I try to track my foods, and avoid those I know I have delayed allergies too. But when so many allergies are delayed, it's hard to tell what's causing the reaction, or even if the reaction (more fatigue) is due to a food. I've had my husband look at my charts and he has a hard time.

CSU Grad Newbie

I have CFS and wonder if I have Celiac disease. Tests show neg but I don't eat enough bad foods before testing to cause a positive. My allergy tests are fine.

Sometimes I eat bread or pasta, don't feel tired after. Sometimes, 1-2 days later I feel more tired.

I never have diaharrea or the usual symptoms.

Is this normal?

This is, actually, pretty normal.... this has a lot to do with how much carbohydrates you eat normally, and if you are overloading on them and sugar when you eat the bread or pasta....you may just be coming down from a "sugar high"...

Simply getting tired a few days after eating a really high carb diet is not indicative of celiacs at all. It is more indicative of a need to balance your carb intake so that it is more even-keel.

If I were to suggest anything to you, as far as testing is concerned, I would suggest getting tested for any blood sugar issues long before wasting time an engery on testing for celiacs....really.

CSU Grad Newbie

Sounds like it could be, or it could be allergies, or intolerances or sensitivities that don't show up on allergy tests. Did you have prick test allergy tests or blood test ones? But a delayed reaction is how gluten hits my dad. Sensitivities tend to hit later, too.

I'll share my symptoms for comparison, see if they help?

I was tired a lot, depressed often, caught little colds and such fairly often, had no diarrhea or any gut symptoms, I tested negative for food allergies on prick tests. When I would up my gluten intake - trying to eat healthy, so I'd have more pasta - I would feel a bit more tired a few days later, maybe, but usually didn't even notice that much.

Once I was diagnosed positive for celiac disease, it didn't help a lot. I was worse, actually, once I went gluten free. Then my GI doc told me that people with the gene to get celiac disease, even if it hadn't triggered, are much more prone to food allergies, and sensitivities, and intolerances. So he tested me with a blood test, and it came back positive for quite a few foods. However, he also told me that they weren't completely accurate because - as you've noticed - you have to have eaten enough of the food beforehand to make it an accurate test. And they tell you nothing about foods that you are intolerant to, or sensitive to.

So, I've gone off a ton of foods since my diagnosis (it's only been 5 months now). I kept a food log, kept to a small list of foods and wrote down all the ingredients and my reactions, etc... Picked out any foods that seemed like they had a pattern and dropped 'em. Which happened quickly. Once I went off foods, suddenly, the other reactions were spaced out, instead of my feeling miserable all the time.

And all the symptoms disappeared. Not tired all the time, no depression...even physical problems like carpal tunnel and back aches are simply gone.

I know a lot of people who test positive for food issues OR celiac disease have been previously diagnosed with CFS, so that's pretty normal as well. Frustrating as heck, but normal.

I wish you good luck in finding out what's going on with your body! Best wishes.

Also, be aware, please, you could feel more tired after cutting out wheat, because you have suddenly dropped the majority of your carbohydrate intake! You must supplement your diet with some other carbohydrate source similar to what the wheat provided you or you will most definitely feel really tired after dropping wheat!!

lisaloo Newbie

This is, actually, pretty normal.... this has a lot to do with how much carbohydrates you eat normally, and if you are overloading on them and sugar when you eat the bread or pasta....you may just be coming down from a "sugar high"...

Simply getting tired a few days after eating a really high carb diet is not indicative of celiacs at all. It is more indicative of a need to balance your carb intake so that it is more even-keel.

If I were to suggest anything to you, as far as testing is concerned, I would suggest getting tested for any blood sugar issues long before wasting time an engery on testing for celiacs....really.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



lisaloo Newbie

I probably only eat gluten about 5 times a month though, it's evenly split between whether I feel worse and more tired later or not. And I don't go on a binge of none, then days in a row, so I don't think it's blood sugar or a problem of carb balencing.

My blood sugar is pretty stable in testing. I stay away from starches, eat regular meals, with small snacks.

So I'm still confused if it's celiac or not.

lisaloo Newbie

I realized looking at my food charts that I always get tired 30-40 hours after eating gluten, so is that Celiac?

CSU Grad Newbie

it's evenly split between whether I feel worse and more tired later or not.

Statistically speaking then, you have a 50/50 chance of feeling tired after eating gluten, is what you are saying. Thus, mathematically, we can show that these two are not correlated. In other words, just doing the math here, the gluten is not causing your tiredness.

That doesn't mean you don't have celiac disease, necessarily, but what you have stated here can not support a conclusion of a relationship with gluten.

The interesting thing to note here, as well, is that you say that you only eat gluten about 5 times a month. This really means that your body is not used to having it in your system. Any reactions you may have to it, if at all, will be disproportionately weighted by this fact.

CSU Grad Newbie

I realized looking at my food charts that I always get tired 30-40 hours after eating gluten, so is that Celiac?

30 to 40 hours is a long time with regard to a reaction to a food. Your reactions should be much more immediate.

You mentioned "food charts"....care to elaborate on them?

Are you eating exactly the same types, (i.e. simple carbs, complex carbs, proteins of the same type, etc), of foods and proportions every day? Also, are you missing meals ever or eating at inconsistent times?

A little more information would be helpful.

Jestgar Rising Star

CSU, if you are going to start claiming things as facts, you will need to start providing references.

  • 2 years later...
mhsamsim Newbie

Sounds like it could be, or it could be allergies, or intolerances or sensitivities that don't show up on allergy tests. Did you have prick test allergy tests or blood test ones? But a delayed reaction is how gluten hits my dad. Sensitivities tend to hit later, too.

I'll share my symptoms for comparison, see if they help?

I was tired a lot, depressed often, caught little colds and such fairly often, had no diarrhea or any gut symptoms, I tested negative for food allergies on prick tests. When I would up my gluten intake - trying to eat healthy, so I'd have more pasta - I would feel a bit more tired a few days later, maybe, but usually didn't even notice that much.

Once I was diagnosed positive for celiac disease, it didn't help a lot. I was worse, actually, once I went gluten free. Then my GI doc told me that people with the gene to get celiac disease, even if it hadn't triggered, are much more prone to food allergies, and sensitivities, and intolerances. So he tested me with a blood test, and it came back positive for quite a few foods. However, he also told me that they weren't completely accurate because - as you've noticed - you have to have eaten enough of the food beforehand to make it an accurate test. And they tell you nothing about foods that you are intolerant to, or sensitive to.

So, I've gone off a ton of foods since my diagnosis (it's only been 5 months now). I kept a food log, kept to a small list of foods and wrote down all the ingredients and my reactions, etc... Picked out any foods that seemed like they had a pattern and dropped 'em. Which happened quickly. Once I went off foods, suddenly, the other reactions were spaced out, instead of my feeling miserable all the time.

And all the symptoms disappeared. Not tired all the time, no depression...even physical problems like carpal tunnel and back aches are simply gone.

I know a lot of people who test positive for food issues OR celiac disease have been previously diagnosed with CFS, so that's pretty normal as well. Frustrating as heck, but normal.

I wish you good luck in finding out what's going on with your body! Best wishes.

Most doctors that are not specialists don't know about gluten sensitivity and celiac, after having celiac a lot of times you have leaky gut what this means is that some food escapes your gut into your blood stream, you immune system attacks these foods and sees them as a foreign object this is why you test positive for a lot of foods, your allergies should go away after your gut is healed.. also after stopping gluten you should have stools samples to check for good and bad bacteria in body since it usually is messed up for celiac patients. please watch Dr vikki's videos on youtube for a lot of interesting informations

psawyer Proficient

Most doctors that are not specialists don't know about gluten sensitivity and celiac, after having celiac a lot of times you have leaky gut what this means is that some food escapes your gut into your blood stream, you immune system attacks these foods and sees them as a foreign object this is why you test positive for a lot of foods, your allergies should go away after your gut is healed.. also after stopping gluten you should have stools samples to check for good and bad bacteria in body since it usually is messed up for celiac patients. please watch Dr vikki's videos on youtube for a lot of interesting informations

This thread is more that two and a half years old. I'm not sure why it is being resuscitated.

As a reminder, the original topic was, "How Long After Ingesting Do Symptoms Appear?"

If you have a few minutes to spend, you could watch this. It is off topic. Vikki Peterson has lots of video out there. This one has a couple of sentences that are related to the topic, once you have watched the first five minutes--which are not.

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. - Ginger38 replied to Ginger38's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      6

      Shingles - Could It Be Related to Gluten/ Celiac

    2. - Scott Adams replied to Silk tha Shocker's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      Help

    3. - Silk tha Shocker posted a topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      Help

    4. - trents replied to Roses8721's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      8

      GI DX celiac despite neg serology and no biopsy

    5. - Roses8721 posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      0

      gluten-free Oatmeal


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,477
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    bwhntr1953
    Newest Member
    bwhntr1953
    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

    • Ginger38
      Thanks, I’m still dealing with the pain and tingling and itching and feeling like bugs or something crawling around on my face and scalp. It’s been a miserable experience. I saw my eye doc last week, the eye itself was okay, so they didn’t do anything. I did take a 7 day course of an antiviral. I’m hoping for a turnaround soon! My life is full of stress but I have been on / off the gluten free diet for the last year , after being talked into going back on gluten to have a biopsy, that looked okay. But I do have positive antibody levels that have been responsive  to a gluten free diet. I can’t help but wonder if the last year has caused all this. 
    • Scott Adams
      I don't think any apps are up to date, which is exactly why this happened to you. Most of the data in such apps is years old, and it doesn't get updated in real time. Ultimately there is no substitution for learning to read labels. The following two lists are very helpful for anyone who is gluten sensitive and needs to avoid gluten when shopping. It's very important to learn to read labels and understand sources of hidden gluten, and to know some general information about product labelling--for example in the USA if wheat is a possible allergen it must be declared on a product's ingredient label like this: Allergens: Wheat.      
    • Silk tha Shocker
      What is the best gluten free scanner app? I have the "gluten-free Scanner" app. I scanned an almond joy and it says it contains gluten when the package is labeled gluten free
    • trents
      Certainly, it would b wise to have a gene test done if your physician is open to it as it would provide some more data to understand what's going on. But keep in mind that the genetic test for celiac disease cannot be used as to diagnose celiac disease, only to establish the potential to develop active celiac disease. About 40% of the general population possess one or both of the primary genes known to be associated with the development of active celiac disease but only about 1% of the population actually develop active celiac disease. So, the gene test is an effective "rule out" tool but not an effective diagnostic tool.
    • Roses8721
      Had Quaker gluten-free oatmeal last night and my stomach is a mess today. NO flu but def stomach stuff. Anyone else?
×
×
  • 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.