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

There's Nothing Left To Eat Without Feeling Sick


sweeeeet

Recommended Posts

sweeeeet Rookie

I have had digestive symptoms for at least 15 years. Doctors aren't sure what I have. But the past year it's been much worse. I tested negative for celiac twice, btw. I know I have IBS, but there was no test for that, they just took my word and told me to drink more water.

I have chronic diarrhea or constipation, (usually about a week of constipation, then four days of diarrhea, then constipation again) stomach gas, cramping, severe bloating, and my stomach makes horribly loud gurgling noises, it sounds like there's water in there sloshing around.

I drink several large bottles of water per day, and take a probiotic called Ultimate 10, that the manager at the Vitamin Shoppe recommended. Nothing has changed.

At first I thought my reactions were due to wheat flour so I gave up stuff like bread, pasta, pizza, etc. But I was still feeling lousy so, since I had chronic diahrrea, I thought it might be lactose, so in addition, I gave up dairy. Still felt lousy, always bloated and queazy. So I thought it might be some kind of meat because I felt so bloated after I ate dinner, so I gave up meat too, deli meat, steak, hot dogs, chicken, etc. Today I am now down to eating a banana for breakfast, a blueberry yogurt for lunch, and nothing for dinner because I am scared to eat something that will set off my symptoms and my stomach is all cramped up and this diarrhea won't stop. I was invited to a party the other day, and just sat there and drank water because I knew I'd rush to the bathroom if I ate even a small piece of cheese or a cracker.

I tried doing an elimination diet last week, like eat one food and see what happens 6 hours later, and so far, milk, eggs, cheese, yogurt, nuts, popcorn, crackers, bananas, apples, beans, cereal, meat, potatos, mayonnaise, mustard, etc. keep me feeling bloated and having stomach cramps and all those problems. I do work out all week, at least 5 hours of cardio, walking and step aerobics. But my scale always says 140. I could eat nothing for a week and it would still say 140.

Anyway, I am so frustrated because there's nothing left to eat! I am so hungry right now.

Anybody have any feedback? Do you have these symptoms too? What is your diagnosis? And what could I possibly eat now????????


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

The tests can be wrong. In fact they are frequently false negatives.

Have you tried a gluten free diet for longer than a few days? You should try a strict gluten free and dairy free for a month at least before challenging with gluten. You won't feel better right away. Most people feel better after two weeks, but some people take longer to heal. It's more than just not eating bread, you need to check everything you eat and watch out for sources of cross contamination like from old cookware, toasters, food shared with gluten-eaters, etc.

Also, I'm not sure I understand what kind of elimination diet you did. The ones I have always read about involve eating a few very simple foods (usually meat and veg) for a week or two and then challenging with one thing per week.

As far as what to eat right now, have you tried eating cooked veggies? Go for easy to digest things like steamed carrots or baked and mashed sweet potatoes.

lucia Enthusiast

At first I thought my reactions were due to wheat flour so I gave up stuff like bread, pasta, pizza, etc. But I was still feeling lousy so, since I had chronic diahrrea, I thought it might be lactose, so in addition, I gave up dairy. Still felt lousy, always bloated and queazy. So I thought it might be some kind of meat because I felt so bloated after I ate dinner, so I gave up meat too, deli meat, steak, hot dogs, chicken, etc. Today I am now down to eating a banana for breakfast, a blueberry yogurt for lunch, and nothing for dinner because I am scared to eat something that will set off my symptoms and my stomach is all cramped up and this diarrhea won't stop. I was invited to a party the other day, and just sat there and drank water because I knew I'd rush to the bathroom if I ate even a small piece of cheese or a cracker.

I'm so sorry to hear about your issues - sounds horrible, but familiar.

You said that you gave up wheat flour. Did you give up gluten? Gluten is found in all wheat derivatives, as well as rye and barley. Check out this list for all of the places where gluten can hide:

https://www.celiac.com/celiac-disease/forbidden-gluten-food-list-unsafe-ingredients-r182/

If you have celiac/gluten intolerance, you'll need to give all of these up before you feel better. Sounds like you already have down to just bananas and yogurt, but you already know you need to eat more than just that. In the beginning, most of us concentrate on whole, unprocessed foods and a lot of fruits and veggies.

Welcome!

Ahorsesoul Enthusiast

I tried doing an elimination diet last week, like eat one food and see what happens 6 hours later,

6 hours is way to short a time. I suggest you decide on what you want to do and stick with it for a few weeks. This problem will go away in a few hours.

tarnalberry Community Regular

oh yeah, 6 hours is nowhere near long enough to see what's bothering you. food takes up to a few days to get through your system, which is why they highly recommend doing elimination diets and challenges with new foods no more than once every few days (three or four at the most, a week is better). waiting only six hours doesn't actually allow you to test any individual food.

sweeeeet Rookie

Well what I meant as far as eliminating certain foods is, I would eat one food, like, say, a fried egg, then wait 6 hours to see if I had any reaction. Usually, I would know within 10 to 15 minutes if I would have a reaction. Eggs give me horrible reactions, btw. Then the next day I would eat two crackers and wait 6 hours and if I had a reaction I'd know it was probably wheat related. Most crackers are a huge problem for me, especially Wheat Thins and Rye Krisp.

BTW, I should not have had yogurt yesterday because of the lactose. I am not touching any lactose anymore, and I need to read up on all foods which contain lactose. Today I had a small fruit cocktail for breakfast, and my stomach was very calm. Thank God for that. I felt really great. My lunch consisted of a small handful of almonds. No problem there. For dinner, I had a baked potato. So far so good.

So aside from me going out to Trader Joes or ordering from a mail order place, what natural foods are gluten free wheat/yeast free, casein free lactose free? If I can find at least a few foods to eat for a while that won't bother me, I'd be very happy. BTW, celiac runs in my family, 3 other people have it, so I was kinda surprised two tests came back negative.

kayo Explorer

You could have non-celiac gluten intolerance, food allergies (either short or late onset), food intolerances, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, parasites, malnutrition, etc.

I agree with the others, 6 hours is not long enough. It's also not a proper elimination diet. You need to establish a baseline for several days, a week would be better and then introduce just one new food every 2-3 days. It takes a long time but without a baseline you're just shooting darts all over the place.

I highly recommend this book: 'IBS - Free At Last' by Patsy Catsos. It includes info on how to do an elimination diet and introduce new foods, and it includes shopping lists. Makes the experience more tolerable and less overwhelming.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



sweeeeet Rookie

You could have non-celiac gluten intolerance, food allergies (either short or late onset), food intolerances, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, parasites, malnutrition, etc.

I agree with the others, 6 hours is not long enough. It's also not a proper elimination diet. You need to establish a baseline for several days, a week would be better and then introduce just one new food every 2-3 days. It takes a long time but without a baseline you're just shooting darts all over the place.

I highly recommend this book: 'IBS - Free At Last' by Patsy Catsos. It includes info on how to do an elimination diet and introduce new foods, and it includes shopping lists. Makes the experience more tolerable and less overwhelming.

Sounds like a really good book, I will definitely look for it. Today I was with my mom and she wanted to go to Friendly's, so I blew it and had a small quesadilla appetizer and a half of a Fribble. Big mistake, I was miserable about 6 hours later.

I don't have all the same celiac symptoms like my relatives who have celiac or my friend, I mean, they get "chicken pox" like scabs and stuff, I don't get that. Oh well, I am able to handle fruit cocktail, pineapple, watermelon, blueberries, etc.

sweeeeet Rookie

I guess you're right, also, I need to fully eliminate one thing for some time, like just gluten, or wheat, or just lactose. But how exactly can I figure out what it is eventually? I mean, lets say I give up lactose and dairy for a whole month or two, BUT eat a Wheat Thin or two and some toast, and get sick, then do I figure it must be wheat related and not lactose related? Or do I have to give it a month or two and then stop eating wheat and introduce lactose to see if there is any change? And if there isn't, might that mean I am probably sensitive to both? If I give both up and feel great after a month or two, I wouldn't know which it was or if it was both, you know what I mean? I sound like a complaining pest I'm sure, but I just want to figure this all out. I've done the glutengest, ez-gest, Beano, all the various enzymes out there, and it isn't working. I just got a 15 billion strain probiotic up from the 13 billion capsules I was taking before, I'll start on it tomorrow. We'll see. For now, It's fresh fruit, I guess. And lots of water. Still can't geet the needle on the scale to budge below 140, but I look better than I did when I weighed 132 last summer.

kayo Explorer

I know what you mean and I had the same questions too.

The trick is to establish a baseline diet (they explain this in the book better than me :D ). For me it is lean protein and rice or potatoes, bananas, strawberries, quinoa, cucumbers, leafy greens, tea, etc. You stay on that base diet until you start to feel better. Then you introduce a food you suspect is bothering, like milk. Don't add any other suspects at this time because it will skew the results. If it doesn't bother you then you can add it into your meal rotation, keep an eye on how you feel. If it does bother you wait 2-3 days or longer before trying another suspect food.

It takes a while but it's worth it. I keep a food diary and a spreadsheet of foods that are 'ok', 'maybe' and 'no'.

I feel so good on my base diet I have been reluctant to try foods in the 'maybe' column. Fortunately my 'ok' list has nice variety.

Tina B Apprentice

I guess you're right, also, I need to fully eliminate one thing for some time, like just gluten, or wheat, or just lactose. But how exactly can I figure out what it is eventually? I mean, lets say I give up lactose and dairy for a whole month or two, BUT eat a Wheat Thin or two and some toast, and get sick, then do I figure it must be wheat related and not lactose related? Or do I have to give it a month or two and then stop eating wheat and introduce lactose to see if there is any change? And if there isn't, might that mean I am probably sensitive to both? If I give both up and feel great after a month or two, I wouldn't know which it was or if it was both, you know what I mean? I sound like a complaining pest I'm sure, but I just want to figure this all out. I've done the glutengest, ez-gest, Beano, all the various enzymes out there, and it isn't working. I just got a 15 billion strain probiotic up from the 13 billion capsules I was taking before, I'll start on it tomorrow. We'll see. For now, It's fresh fruit, I guess. And lots of water. Still can't geet the needle on the scale to budge below 140, but I look better than I did when I weighed 132 last summer.

You can eliminate the lactose question quickly by having a formal lactose tolerance test:

Open Original Shared Link

Skylark Collaborator

The classic elimination diet goes all the way down to just three or four foods, to avoid exactly what you're talking about. Most common is lamb, rice, and pears. I ate leaf lettuce too when I did mine. You eat only those three foods for two weeks and see if things settle down. You could include the bananas if you're sure they agree with you but definitely no dairy.

After two weeks if everything settles down you add foods back one at a time, usually three days apart. You always challenge with simple, single foods. You want to test eggs, you eat a plain egg and not an omelette with seasonings. Cooked foods can be different from raw too, so you test both with foods you eat either way. Also, six hours is nowhere near long enough to wait between foods because food intolerances are often delayed. A delay of up to 24 hours is common; up to 48 is possible.

GFCeliacMom Newbie

Hope this helps.

One of mine has a very sensitive tummy and we have found a yummy snack that he tolerates well and actually thinks is a quite a treat. It's called Gudernoobs and they're made by WooHoo Foods. It comes in 4 varieties, but only 3 of them are 100% gluten free. I think it's the omega-3s in them that are helping my little one so much too.

Best of luck :)

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. - Lotte18 commented on Scott Adams's article in Diagnosis, Testing & Treatment
      9

      A Future Beyond the Gluten-Free Diet? Scientists Test a New Cell Therapy for Celiac Disease (+Video)

    2. - knitty kitty replied to McKinleyWY's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      Accuracy of testing concerns

    3. - trents replied to McKinleyWY's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      Accuracy of testing concerns

    4. - McKinleyWY posted a topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      Accuracy of testing concerns

    5. - trents replied to Teaganwhowantsanexpltion's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      4

      A little about me and my celiac disease

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,239
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Y. Chan
    Newest Member
    Y. Chan
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • knitty kitty
      Welcome to the forum, @McKinleyWY, For a genetic test, you don't have to eat gluten, but this will only show if you have the genes necessary for the development of Celiac disease.  It will not show if you have active Celiac disease.   Eating gluten stimulates the production of antibodies against gluten which mistakenly attack our own bodies.  The antibodies are produced in the small intestines.  Three grams of gluten are enough to make you feel sick and ramp up anti-gluten antibody production and inflammation for two years afterwards.  However, TEN grams of gluten or more per day for two weeks is required to stimulate anti-gluten antibodies' production enough so that the anti-gluten antibodies move out of the intestines and into the bloodstream where they can be measured in blood tests.  This level of anti-gluten antibodies also causes measurable damage to the lining of the intestines as seen on biopsy samples taken during an endoscopy (the "gold standard" of Celiac diagnosis).   Since you have been experimenting with whole wheat bread in the past year or so, possibly getting cross contaminated in a mixed household, and your immune system is still so sensitized to gluten consumption, you may want to go ahead with the gluten challenge.   It can take two years absolutely gluten free for the immune system to quit reacting to gluten exposure.   Avoiding gluten most if the time, but then experimenting with whole wheat bread is a great way to keep your body in a state of inflammation and illness.  A diagnosis would help you stop playing Russian roulette with your and your children's health.      
    • trents
      Welcome to the celiac.com community, @McKinleyWY! There currently is no testing for celiac disease that does not require you to have been consuming generous amounts of gluten (at least 10g daily, about the amount in 4-6 slices of wheat bread) for at least two weeks and, to be certain of accurate testing, longer than that. This applies to both phases of testing, the blood antibody tests and the endoscopy with biopsy.  There is the option of genetic testing to see if you have one or both of the two genes known to provide the potential to develop celiac disease. It is not really a diagnostic measure, however, as 30-40% of the general population has one or both of these genes whereas only about 1% of the general population actually develops celiac disease. But genetic testing is valuable as a rule out measure. If you don't have either of the genes, it is highly unlikely that you can have celiac disease. Having said all that, even if you don't have celiac disease you can have NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity) which shares many of the same symptoms as celiac disease but does not involve and autoimmune reaction that damages the lining of the small bowel as does celiac disease. Both conditions call for the complete elimination of gluten from the diet. I hope this brings some clarity to your questions.
    • McKinleyWY
      Hello all, I was diagnosed at the age of 2 as being allergic to yeast.  All my life I have avoided bread and most products containing enriched flour as they  contain yeast (when making the man made vitamins to add back in to the flour).  Within the last year or so, we discovered that even whole wheat products bother me but strangely enough I can eat gluten free bread with yeast and have no reactions.  Obviously, we have come to believe the issue is gluten not yeast.  Times continues to reinforce this as we are transitioning to a gluten free home and family.  I become quite ill when I consume even the smallest amount of gluten. How will my not having consumed breads/yeast/gluten for the better part of decades impact a biopsy or blood work?  I would love to know if it is a gluten intolerance or a genetic issue for family members but unsure of the results given my history of limited gluten intake.   I appreciate the input from those who have gone before me in experience and knowledge. Thank you all!
    • trents
      I know what you mean. When I get glutened I have severe gut cramps and throw up for 2-3 hr. and then have diarrhea for another several hours. Avoid eating out if at all possible. It is the number one source of gluten contamination for us celiacs. When you are forced to eat out at a new restaurant that you are not sure is safe, try to order things that you can be sure will not get cross contaminated like a boiled egg, baked potatos, steamed vegies, fresh fruit. Yes, I know that doesn't sound as appetizing as pizza or a burger and fries but your health is at stake. I also realize that as a 14 year old you don't have a lot of control over where you eat out because you are tagging along with others or adults are paying for it. Do you have support from your parents concerning your need to eat gluten free? Do you believe they have a good understanding of the many places gluten can show up in the food supply?
    • Peace lily
      Okay went online to check green mountain k cups .It was said that the regular coffees are fine but they couldn’t guarantee cross contamination.with the flavors. im trying to figure out since I eliminated the suyrup so far so good. I’m hoping. thanks it feels good to listen to other people there views.
×
×
  • 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.