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

Bloating!


CarolinaKip

Recommended Posts

Skylark Collaborator

I'm wondering about oxalate in the spinach. Unfortunately, the other greens that are low fructose also have some oxalate. Try a small serving of cooked cauliflower or broccoli if that hasn't bothered you in the past.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



CarolinaKip Community Regular

Thanks everyone. I know I'm super sensitive. I dont feel glutened, just side pain, tummy buring and bloat. I feel a little better today, but want to eat some veggies and fruit. Before going gluten-free, I ate so healthy. Salads every day with veggies/fruit/lean meat. I miss that! I rarely ate cookies etc. I ate wheat bread and oatmeal/w honey every morning if you can imagine. No wonder I was hurting so bad. Melba toast with lunch....etc

I cannot eat almonds, peanuts and brazil nuts due to allergy. I don't know what my DQ is. I think that is what was asked, sorry it was a long day in kindedrgarten and on the bus :) I'm tired and my brain is fried! I ate a simple chicken and jasmine rice today, some gastro issues, but not a lot of pain. Until I came home and ate two slices of Hormel chicken gluten-free meat with a mission corn tortila. I'll try the other veggies, thanks for the replies.

cassP Contributor

I'm wondering about oxalate in the spinach. Unfortunately, the other greens that are low fructose also have some oxalate. Try a small serving of cooked cauliflower or broccoli if that hasn't bothered you in the past.

oh interesting... i knew oxalates should be avoided if you have kidney stones.. but can they cause a reaction for some??

gf-soph Apprentice

I'm getting back into FODMAP after a false start, and it has helped the bloating heaps.

I'm on the yahoo group, it's pretty active, well worth checking out.

Thanks for posting the hedra page - I'm having a look now and it seems great!

burdee Enthusiast

Thanks everyone. I know I'm super sensitive. I dont feel glutened, just side pain, tummy buring and bloat. I feel a little better today, but want to eat some veggies and fruit. Before going gluten-free, I ate so healthy. Salads every day with veggies/fruit/lean meat. I miss that! I rarely ate cookies etc. I ate wheat bread and oatmeal/w honey every morning if you can imagine. No wonder I was hurting so bad. Melba toast with lunch....etc

I cannot eat almonds, peanuts and brazil nuts due to allergy. I don't know what my DQ is. I think that is what was asked, sorry it was a long day in kindedrgarten and on the bus :) I'm tired and my brain is fried! I ate a simple chicken and jasmine rice today, some gastro issues, but not a lot of pain. Until I came home and ate two slices of Hormel chicken gluten-free meat with a mission corn tortila. I'll try the other veggies, thanks for the replies.

I don't know your history or whether you've ever taken any acid blocking drugs, but you could have low stomach acid, which could make you bloat after eating almost anything. Many people with celiac disease have low stomach acid, because gluten antibodies can attack the parietal cells of the stomach. Those cells produce stomach acid, which is necessary for proper digestion of food and absorption of vitamins and minerals from that food. Before I was tested for stomach acid production and started taking HCl supplements, I bloated after EVERY meal, no matter what I ate. (I was also abstaining from all my blood test diagnosed food allergies, but still bloated.)

Skylark Collaborator

oh interesting... i knew oxalates should be avoided if you have kidney stones.. but can they cause a reaction for some??

Yes, not everyone handles oxalates well.

Here's a fairly interesting blog post I turned up on Google about them.

Open Original Shared Link

dilettantesteph Collaborator

do you know what your DQ genes are??? im starting to wonder if Celiac's degree of sensitivity can be related to what their genes are... OR maybe its only related to amount of damage in the gut.??? it's all so interesting to me.

before i went "gluten lite & mostly carb free" a decade ago- i DID get to the point where i was having the "D" every day. but im not one of those people now who gets the "D" from CC. i definitely have side effects, and the last time i ingested gluten- i had Tacychardia & severe nausea... but i usually get the "C" & painful gas, and strange Bms... LONG BEFORE any "D".

im a double DQ8... i didnt know if the classic "DQ 2.5" was more sensitive than me- or if it's just the damage.

sorry to ramble- i just find it fascinating

I find it really interesting too, but not enough to shell out the $300, or really $1200 for our family of 4. I think it must be genetic because my son is even more sensitive than I am. My husband won't get tested. My daughter had a negative blood test. Lots of people seem to think it has to do with amount of exposure to gluten and it could be that too. My son did eat a lot of vegetarian meat substitute(before diagnosis) which was made from wheat gluten. How could I have done that to him! But he was diagnosed at age 10 and I wasn't diagnosed until age 47.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



cassP Contributor

skylark: thanks! interesting blog

step: my gene test was only 150$ but ya- its not necessary, just interesting... not as important as the blood test or diet. diet may even be MORE evidential- due to common false negative tests.

:)

CarolinaKip Community Regular

I don't know your history or whether you've ever taken any acid blocking drugs, but you could have low stomach acid, which could make you bloat after eating almost anything. Many people with celiac disease have low stomach acid, because gluten antibodies can attack the parietal cells of the stomach. Those cells produce stomach acid, which is necessary for proper digestion of food and absorption of vitamins and minerals from that food. Before I was tested for stomach acid production and started taking HCl supplements, I bloated after EVERY meal, no matter what I ate. (I was also abstaining from all my blood test diagnosed food allergies, but still bloated.)

I lived off of gas meds and acid blocking meds for years due to beginning told I had acid reflux. When I went gluten-free I stopped taking any med. This will go on my list to ask the gastro next month. I'm hoping he will take me seriously. I feel better gluten-free, but would love to have a totally bloat and pain free day. I have no idea what to eat anymore,sigh.....Thanks for the input.

dilettantesteph Collaborator

skylark: thanks! interesting blog

step: my gene test was only 150$ but ya- its not necessary, just interesting... not as important as the blood test or diet. diet may even be MORE evidential- due to common false negative tests.

:)

Where did you get it done?

burdee Enthusiast

I lived off of gas meds and acid blocking meds for years due to beginning told I had acid reflux. When I went gluten-free I stopped taking any med. This will go on my list to ask the gastro next month. I'm hoping he will take me seriously. I feel better gluten-free, but would love to have a totally bloat and pain free day. I have no idea what to eat anymore,sigh.....Thanks for the input.

Many traditional docs believe drug companies' ads about excess stomach acid causing reflux. Actually a weakened lower esophageal sphincter (LES), which can open at inappropriate times, can cause reflux. Food allergies, gluten intolerance, certain foods and beverages like alcohol, caffeine, chocolate, peppermint and onions, as well as some drugs like ibuprofen and demerol can weaken the lower esophageal sphincter. When we swallow food, a normal stomach will produce enough acid to biochemically signal the LES to close until more food comes down the esophagus and then close again. If you have low stomach acid, you can reflux more easily and not digest food as well, which causes bloating and discomfort.

I'm glad you stopped taking acid blocking meds. However continued digestive problems may mean you have low stomach acid or deficient good bacteria in your intestines. Both can cause bloating. For more information, see "Why Stomach Acid is Good for You" by Dr. Jonathon Wright.

cassP Contributor

Where did you get it done?

i ordered mine thru Enterolab. people say its controversial & nondiagnostic. but knowing what my genes are really helped motivate me- and go back to my Gi... and now, im trying to get my family to get tested. so frustrating!! since i read about a certain diet i love and will not name here-> most of my family is so gluten lite that a blood test would be inconclusive. my dad is the only one who is eating enough gluten but he's so dang stubborn he wont get a test :angry: but i know now that both my mom AND dad have at least 1 DQ8. my mom has Hashimoto's.. and my Dad has had lymphoma & an arterial blockage & anxiety/behavioral issues. BOTH my parents families have suspicious gluten related issues. i really wish they screened for Celiac in america the way they do in Italy or Finland :(

and- i read the same book as Burdee!!! my doc gave it to me after i did the Heidelberg test. its a great book- and very enlightening.

dilettantesteph Collaborator

My mom died from lymphomia. My dad had a negative blood test but decided to try a gluten free diet due to some annoying symptoms which went away. Now he experiences glutening when he gets accidental gluten. I'm guessing that I got it from both sides. It would be interesting to get the test done.

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

      Recovery from gluten challenge

    2. - annamarie6655 posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      0

      Airborne Gluten?

    3. - trents replied to Mell2's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      13

      Rectal pain

    4. - Celiac and Salty replied to Mell2's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      13

      Rectal pain

    5. - Rogol72 replied to Butch68's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      2

      Guinness, can you drink it?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,235
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    kssynlson37
    Newest Member
    kssynlson37
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Kirita
      I’m wondering if anyone has had any experience with the gluten challenge. My teenager completed a gluten challenge over the summer, it ended up being 10 weeks although she stopped being consistent eating gluten after 6. Her previous endoscopy was negative but this past August it was positive after the gluten challenge. If you have done the gluten challenge, how long did it take you to feel back to normal? It took about two months before she got “glutened” again but now she’s having difficult coming back from that and has a lot of fatigue. I’m hoping someone has some advice! 
    • annamarie6655
      Hello everyone, I was on here a few months ago trying to figure out if I was reacting to something other than gluten, to which a very helpful response was that it could be xanthin or guar gum.    Since then, I have eaten items with both of those ingredients in it and I have not reacted to it, so my mystery reaction to the Digiorno pizza remains.    HOWEVER, I realized something recently- the last time I got glutened and the most recent time I got glutened, I truly never ate anything with gluten in it. But i did breathe it in.    The first time was a feed barrel for my uncle’s chickens- all of the dust came right up, and most of what was in there was wheat/grains. The second time was after opening a pet food bag and accidentally getting a huge whiff of it.    When this happens, I tend to have more neurological symptoms- specifically involuntary muscle spasms/jerks everywhere. It also seems to cause migraines and anxiety as well. Sometimes, with more airborne exposure, I get GI symptoms, but not every time.    My doctor says he’s never heard of it being an airborne problem, but also said he isn’t well versed in celiac specifics. I don’t have the money for a personal dietician, so I’m doing the best I can.    is there anyone else who has experienced this, or gets similar neurological symptoms? 
    • trents
      I was suffering from PF just previous to being dx with celiac disease about 25 yr. ago but have not been troubled with it since. Not sure what the connection between the two is of if there is one. But I do know it is a very painful condition that takes your breath away when it strikes.
    • Celiac and Salty
      I have dealt with proctalgia fugax on and off for a year now. It feels almost paralyzing during an episode and they have started lasting longer and longer, sometimes 20+ minutes. I was recently diagnosed with celiac disease and wonder if the 2 are related. I did request a prescription for topical nitroglycerin for my PF episodes and that has helped tremendously!
    • Rogol72
      Hey @Butch68, I also have dermatitis herpetiformis but don't suffer from it anymore. I used to drink Guinness too but I drink Cider now when out on social occasions. I assume you are in Ireland or the UK. If it's any good to you ... 9 White Deer based in Cork brew a range of gluten-free products including a gluten-free Stout. I'm not sure if they are certified though. https://www.9whitedeer.ie/ I haven't come across any certified gluten-free stouts this side of the pond.
×
×
  • 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.