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

Could My Daughter Have Cd?


lynda-29

Recommended Posts

lynda-29 Newbie

I have been trying to figure out what's wrong with my daughter since she was 9 months old, I found this site today and she sounds like she has a lot of the symptoms, but I could be just paranoid.

Since she was about 8-9 months old she got a rash on her bum, I could not get rid of, I can get rid of it with a certain cream, but if I don't use it she will get the rash again. It


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Guest nini

it could be. Try keeping a food diary and tracking any and all reactions that occur after eating.

for ex. breakfast, cheerios, milk... immediate reactions. none noted, 10 minutes, none noted, 30 minutes cranky and irritable, 45 minutes, diarreah diaper and sore bum

lunch turkey bologne, cheese, juice immediate reactions, none noted, no reactions noted, happy baby

snack saltines,water, immediate reaction, vomiting, 20 minutes diarreah diaper...

and so on... remember this is just an example. Try charting what she reacts to for a few days, then if it appears to be only when she eats something obvious with wheat, you might want to try the gluten free diet. Talk to her pediatrician though because you really don't want to do this all by yourself.

NOW, if the ped.s office dismisses your theory of possible celiac, don't give up. Try to educate them on what you have learned so far researching your daughters symptoms.

Ultimately you are your child's best advocate, and you know your child best. If you do decide that you see a pattern and want to try the gluten-free diet, this board is a terrific resource. We'll help make it easy for you!

VydorScope Proficient

Lynda, sounds like your at the exact stage I am at with my 21 month old. IF you treat celiac disease as if it were an allergy, its easy to test for at home...

I suggest you you put her on a gluten-free diet for at least week. Be very careful that you realy are gluten-free, even if it means nothing from the bread/grains group at all. Eggs for breakfast instead of cereal, rice instead of pasta, etc. See if she improves. If so then you know that something you eliminated was the problem. So to test if its gluton, give her some foods high in gluton, bread, whole wheat crackers, somthing like that. If her behavior starts to revert, you have your answer.

Thats how you find any tradtional allegery with out doctor intervention. Its free, and conclusive if your careful about it. The only other way would be to convice your docotor to do a blood test for you, which in all liklyhood take just as long, and cost you more.

And for the picky out there I know that celiac disease is not an allergy, but for testing methodolgy here, it can be considered as such. :D

Merika Contributor

It's true you can figure out what she should eat via an elimination diet. BUT personally, I would want to know if I had a wheat allergy (unpleasant but nothing more) or celiac, and possible larger health ramifications down the road caused by non-strict dietary compliance (think teenager....) or accidental long-term ingestion or....and I would NOT want to take a gluten challenge for 6 months, just to take a blood test, that had someone bothered to do while I was actually eating the stuff would be nearly painless....

Anyway, as an adult, that's my very opinionated .02 :)

Merika

key Contributor

We have done blood tests. I am not sure at this point if they did all of them, but they never mentioned that it was celiac. The endocrinologist said to me one day, "well at least you know it isn't celiac"! Well, after a couple of months of him being so sick and me researching on the computer, I find out that he has a ton of symptoms of celiac. So I just put him on the diet. He had his first normal stool EVER!! Now he has normal stools all the time! Started eating, gaining weight, etc.

I guess my point is to be VERY sure the doctors know what they are doing. I would try the diet, even if they tell you it isn't celiac. I mean if you aren't finding any other solutions to what is going on. Plus I am wondering if insurance can drop you if you have this diagnoses? Anybody have this happen? My son already probably has something called Neurofibromatosis1 (just from some birthmarks he has). Anyway, I was told if they put it on his chart, that insurance could drop him.

Nice huh! That is SO maddening to me. It is quite obvious to my husband and I what was making our son so sick.

Yes, it does sound like it could be celiac, but it I guess it could be an allergy to another food too.

Monica

Merika Contributor

Yeah, there are several different blood tests, and the docs need to run the whole celiac "panel" not just the 1 or 2 tests that are cheaper and they're usually tempted to do. Also, I've heard that blood tests on very young kids are not always accurate. Anybody here know more about this?

And Monica, :) hey if the diet works then it's definitely worth it!

Merika

Guest Lucy

my son was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in july 04 and celiac in November 04. Your daughter has alot of the symptoms my son had.

Both Type 1 diabetes and celiac are auto immunr diseases. The rash on the butt was one of his first symptoms of diabetes. Also the clingyness. But now I don't know if that was the celiac or the diabetes.

I would ask them to do more tests. If your dr doesn't want to, then insist on it.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



lynda-29 Newbie

I took her to the doctor today and told him she has a lot of symptoms of celiac disease but he said all the symptoms could be normal and told me to keep a food diary for a week, if I think she's reacting to wheat he gave me a form for her to get tested. I noticed he also put a glucose test on it too. I think I'm just going to go get her tested tomorrow.

My husband has Type 1 diabetes, so I usually test her every few months. I guess it's time to test her again. The only symptoms of diabetes that I've been watching out for is thristy and peeing a lot. Are there any more I should be watching out for?

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,826
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Martis
    Newest Member
    Martis
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • sleuth
      Of course my son is on a 100% gluten free diet.  I wish his symptoms were not debilitating as there are right now.  He cannot work, even when a miniscule of cross contamination occurs.  It's not just GI distress, but intense fatigue, brain fog, depression, anxiety, insomnia, etc.  It's literally neurological inflammation.  Not to be taken lightly here.  We have sought out many other possible ways to cope during this window of time (8 months!!!!)  without success.   AN-PEP does not help and seems like studies on this are not well researched.  So, we are trying this out because research shows some promising results.  And, all participants showed no cravings afterwards, no signs of addiction.  The patch is different than the oral route such as smoking, vaping, gum, pouch, etc. 
    • Scott Adams
      Have you tried AN-PEP enzymes, for example, GlutenX (who is a sponsor here)? A lot of research has shown that it can break down small amounts of gluten in the stomach, before it reaches the intestines. It might be a better approach than risking nicotine addiction, and the questionable research around this. I also hope that he’s trying to be 100% Gluten-Free.
    • Me,Sue
      Hi all  I was diagnosed Coeliac a few years ago and follow a gluten free diet. The list of foods that I can eat without a problem grows shorter on a weekly basis. [I also have diabetes and asthma also].  BUT the reason I am posting this is because I seem to struggle with nausea quite a lot, which is really quite debilitating, and I was wondering if others suffer from nausea, even if following a gluten free diet. 
    • sleuth
      @fatjacksonthecat I have been doing some digging about the topic of nicotine and celiac.  I came across many studies that showed that the nicotine patch helped many with long covid and chronic fatigue syndrome.  I have a son who was diagnosed with celiac and his symptoms are severe when he is glutened.  He shows a lot of neurological inflammation and suffered with fatigue, brain fog, depression, anxiety and insomnia. There have been studies revealing that nicotine smoke actually masking celiac symptoms.  I also read that microdosing with a nictoine patch prevents one from addiction.  We are currently trying this out and so far it has lifted the brain fog and helped with anxiety and mood.  One of the studies I have read showed that it's not so much the dose, but the length of time a person is on the patch that showed improvements.  Many showed significant improvement as early as week 3 and continued through week 12.  We are taking 3 day breaks in between to make sure we don't down regulate the nicotine receptors.   How have things been for you?  Are you still chewing nicotine gum?  Perhaps, try the patch?  And how long did it take to ease up on your symptoms when glutened?
    • cristiana
      Hi @KathyR37 and a very warm welcome here.  I am so very sorry that you are going through all of this. I just wanted to check, have you ever been tested for any other gastrointestinal conditions? Cristiana  
×
×
  • 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.