Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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

Just Patting Myself On The Back


ChristineSelhi

Recommended Posts

ChristineSelhi Rookie

Hi Everyone,

I posted over a year and a half ago about possibly being a false negative for celiac disease. After a number of cross-contaminations that left me out of commission for a few days each, I have decided to take matters into my own hands.

I am nearly certain that I have celiac disease, and also frustrated with the distinction between celiac and gluten intolerance, since it seems that many people in this forum have symptoms as debilitating as those who have the official diagnosis of celiac disease. I also just don't believe that doctors understand this well enough to know if their methods of diagnosing are accurate.

I was never offered a blood test before I stopped eating gluten, and I was never willing to take the gluten challenge, so they did a biopsy of my small intestine and a DNA test. The biopsy looking for flattened celia was somewhat useless, since I had not been eating gluten for some time, and The DNA test came back as non-celiac. I posted on here wondering if there was anyone I still could have been a false negative, since my symptoms when glutened (bowel movement problems which I won't detail here, IBS, vitamin deficiencies, brain fog, etc) all point to celiac disease.

I know it shouldn't matter, but it does matter to me, because sometimes it makes me feel crazy when people treat this as a food fad when I tell them what I can and cannot eat. Some people can be very mean about it.

So, I called the doctor who did the DNA test to get my exact results. I hope this will lead to more clarity. I can't believe it took me a year and a half after that first posting to do so. I was just kind of proud of myself for finally asking.

Sometimes it's the little things....


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



lynnelise Apprentice

Honestly if it's someone you don't know very well and they are the type that won't take "gluten intolerance" seriously just tell them you have celiac. They don't need to know your medical history. If you have all the symptoms and quitting gluten makes those symptoms go away then I say you have your answer.

"If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, looks like a duck, it must be a duck!"

notme Experienced

do you feel better on a gluten-free diet? i know what you mean about having a diagnosis. it's like putting the lid on the box... but..... if you feel better, then stand your ground. someone else said on this forum "nobody ever died from not eating wheat" also it's none of their business if you choose to feel better!

VioletBlue Contributor

The DNA tests are, um, interesting. I believe there is a lot that is not understoodd about Celiac Disease, Gluten Intolerance and the differences between the two. And that includes in the realm of DNA. Also the results of the DNA depend on whether a doctor sticks to a strict interpretation of what a "celiac gene" is. The understand of which is which and how much it matters is changing and evolving.

My suggestion would be to find out which genes the test found and start googling the specific genes for yourself to see what kind of information comes up. You will find more current information on the web about DNA than exists in your doctors head.

And BRAVO for asking! :D

Hi Everyone,

I posted over a year and a half ago about possibly being a false negative for celiac disease. After a number of cross-contaminations that left me out of commission for a few days each, I have decided to take matters into my own hands.

I am nearly certain that I have celiac disease, and also frustrated with the distinction between celiac and gluten intolerance, since it seems that many people in this forum have symptoms as debilitating as those who have the official diagnosis of celiac disease. I also just don't believe that doctors understand this well enough to know if their methods of diagnosing are accurate.

I was never offered a blood test before I stopped eating gluten, and I was never willing to take the gluten challenge, so they did a biopsy of my small intestine and a DNA test. The biopsy looking for flattened celia was somewhat useless, since I had not been eating gluten for some time, and The DNA test came back as non-celiac. I posted on here wondering if there was anyone I still could have been a false negative, since my symptoms when glutened (bowel movement problems which I won't detail here, IBS, vitamin deficiencies, brain fog, etc) all point to celiac disease.

I know it shouldn't matter, but it does matter to me, because sometimes it makes me feel crazy when people treat this as a food fad when I tell them what I can and cannot eat. Some people can be very mean about it.

So, I called the doctor who did the DNA test to get my exact results. I hope this will lead to more clarity. I can't believe it took me a year and a half after that first posting to do so. I was just kind of proud of myself for finally asking.

Sometimes it's the little things....

ChristineSelhi Rookie

Hey everyone, thanks for the support. It's tough out there, and I am very happy to have found celiac.com to go to when I am feeling frustrated or confused. I have an innate desire to understand things, especially when they effect my life so much. Anyway, I await the mail, and then I can make my own judgement of how I feel about how I present it to the "general public." At the behest of my doctor (new gp who didn't do the original tests) and my husband, I have been identifying as a celiac for the last 8 months or so. It does make it so much easier than explaining how complex my reaction is. I say this as I scratch my chin (which is itchy and a little broken out) and wonder what the heck I ate this time that was contaminated with one one-hundredth of a percentage of a gram of gluten. Sigh. But, I have found the thing that makes me feel better, and for that I give thanks.

rdunbar Explorer

those moments of doubt are perfectly understandable, but time, and the healing process (hopefully) clears all this up. I know I went through a period of maybe not doubt, but denial or stubborness, where i was careless about being exposed to gluten, coupled with just not having the information I needed in order to protect myself from it. well, then I discovered this board!

I'm pretty much self-diagnosed; I mean, being on a catering job (outside), and just breathing the air near someone slicing up a lot of bread for a party, and very quickly doubling over in pain, getting so lightheaded that I could barely stand up, much less work, and then getting insanely irritable was enough of a test for me. I would imagine this test has a better success rate than the blood tests!

sometimes I wish i had an 'official' diagnosis so that certain members of my family would take this seriously, because I know that they would respect it if someone in a white coat says its true, (theres a lot of nurses in my family!); but other than that, I see no need for an official DX for myself, and i'm getting more comfortable with that all the time. It's not like the treatment for celiac is a dangerous treatment that one would be foolish to needlessly take; and anyways, who in thier right mind would chose to have a truly gluten free lifestyle, free of CC and 'cheating', and eating out, without having to? If someone is willing to go through the inconvieniences, and shifts in social norms that it takes to have a gluten-free lifestyle for any length of time, then that would be proof enough for me; who would do that unless it was making a HUGE difference in how they felt?

I'm sorry, but a desire to be trendy is never going to be enough motivation EVER for someone to put themselves through this!

just this last weekend, someone told me they had been gluten-free for 6 weeks, while they were drinking a beer; somehow I suspected that they had been cheating along the way! ( i did point out that beer contains gluten, "oh, really!?")

After a point its like a chess game, and you're in check mate, you only have one move; If I knowingly consumed gluten with what I know now,and all the suffering i've been through, it would be like conceding the game; the game of life!

gf-soph Apprentice

I'm technically non-celiac gluten intolerant too. When someone asks why I'm not eating the usual food, I ask them if they've heard of celiac. If they haven't, I give them the basic info, e.g. 'when I eat gluten, which is the protein in wheat, barley and rye it causes my immune system to attack my digestive tract and it makes me very sick'. If they've heard of celiac I sometimes go in to more detail if they're particularly interested, but often I just leave it there.

I don't feel defensive about being a non-celiac, but then I do have a GP who treats me just as seriously as a celiac. I also know enough about the issue to explain to people why it is just as important for me to remain gluten free as a celiac. I think because I am confident in my position people don't feel the need to challenge me about it. With health professionals they don't always fully understand, but I have enough poor blood tests and other symptoms that they seem to take me seriously anyway.

I know the frustration of diagnosis, I had positive blood tests but not as high as in a full blown untreated celiac, according to my initial gastro (they were 75 and 25, range 0-20, he said a celiac would be in the hundreds). After a negative biospy he told me point blank that gluten wasn't my problem and not to give it up, and I was happy to believe him. I went another year eating gluten, getting sicker and sicker, before a new GP educated me and got me to stop eating gluten. If I had stopped when I found out about the first blood tests i believe I would have escaped the persistent iron and b12 deficiencies, the gluten related depression, and the worst of the continuing gi issues and food intolerances that I now have to address using extremely restrictive eating. If I had any idea I would have stopped. If I had just hit google and asked these people here, who knows! I probably would have had more doubt in my mind about my decision, but I would have suffered far, far less.

When it comes down to it what you eat or don't eat is entirely up to you. The fact that you don't tick all the boxes for a simple diagnosis doesn't mean it's not worthwhile being gluten free if it works for you, and it obviously does. I also wouldn't be too swayed by the gene test, as they seem to be learning more and more about genes that can be related, it's not a simple as some of the doctors would have you belive. I hear it here all the time, but the single best test is how you respond to the diet :)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ChristineSelhi Rookie

I got my test results in the mail and I am DQ2 and DQ8 negative. The numbers are very different depending on where I look, but I remember my doctor saying at the time that 85% of the people with celiac had these two genes. Anyone know what the numbers are now?

mushroom Proficient

I got my test results in the mail and I am DQ2 and DQ8 negative. The numbers are very different depending on where I look, but I remember my doctor saying at the time that 85% of the people with celiac had these two genes. Anyone know what the numbers are now?

Did they test for what genes you did have, or just for DQ2 and DQ8.? What genes you actually have would be the more interesting information.

Skylark Collaborator

Did they test for what genes you did have, or just for DQ2 and DQ8.? What genes you actually have would be the more interesting information.

This is the biggest study on DQ2 and DQ8. Note that the population they tested had GI complaints.

Open Original Shared Link

MelindaLee Contributor

This is the biggest study on DQ2 and DQ8. Note that the population they tested had GI complaints.

Open Original Shared Link

I was tested for DQ2 and DQ8. One of them was positive (I don't remember which at this moment and am too lazy to go find the paper ;) ) However, my GI dx me with Celiac, due to having previously doing an endoscopy which found "something in the biopsy which looks like" I had celiac. (I was too uneducated at that time to ask more questions, but I follow up with him next week.) After the test, I was advised to go gluten-free. I have had a 150% improvement of symptoms I never knew could go away! (I thought it was old age and arthritis) "what is in a name??"

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      130,963
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Fire Steph
    Newest Member
    Fire Steph
    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

    • trents
      I don't think we can say that just one thing, whether vitamin D deficiency or emotional trauma, or a viral infection, or what ever is always what triggers the onset of celiac disease. We do know there is a genetic component to it and there is increasing evidence that factors creating gut dysbiosis (such as overuse of antibiotics and preservatives and environmental toxins) are major players. Hybridizing of heirloom wheat strains to increase the gluten content by multiples may also be a factor.
    • trents
      Thanks for the follow-up correction. Yes, so not 10x normal and the biopsy is therefore totally appropriate to rule out a false positive or the unlikely but still possible situation of the elevated lab test number being caused by something besides celiac disease. 
    • Waterdance
      Thanks. I believe I can trace my gluten and milk allergies to specific traumas in my life. I've had some quite severe traumas over my lifetime. Mostly in my history I was so out of sorts surviving that diagnosing gluten sensitivity/allergy/celiac was just not on the table for such a survival mode existence. Vitamin D makes sense too. Now I take very good care of myself, I have a rock solid stability and I do take 1,500 IU of D daily. It's more obvious to me now what's causing problems and so most of the time I only eat protein and vegetables. I cheat sometimes. I end up paying for it though. 
    • Heatherisle
      Thanks everyone for replying. Actually made a mistake when stating the lab range for results, should have been 0.0-7.0 not 0.7 u/ml. She was 19 u/ml. I’m afraid science bamboozles me especially trying to understand all the IgA’s and other bits!!!!Regular blood results like full blood count etc not so much!!!!
    • John767
      DiGiornos gluten free pizza at one point was  made from a dough derived of wheat starch...yet they were able to call it gluten free probably because it came in at under 20ppm for gluten.  Apparently the recipe was changed and the pizza not longer contains a wheat starch derived crust.  As for the Heinz dressing, it could be an issue with cross contamination with wheat barley and or rye somewhere during the production process.  If you read how Frito-Lays (on their website) designates items gluten free, you will understand the variances in the lengths companies go through in deciding when to put on a gluten free label and when not--Frito-Lays is pretty solid.  Also being in Canada, they may follow a common international rule of less than 20ppm of gluten is all that is required to be labeled gluten free regardless of the grains used to manufacture the product (common in Europe, Central, and South America)...it took a couple of really rough mornings after consuming some Dura Damm (labeled as gluten free outside the USA) for me to realize that it was a gluten reduced beer. Same with Mahou Beer which actually says in Spanish "suitable for celiacs", unfortunately it is not suitable for this celiac and of course the following day was really rough as well...really take the time to read the ingredients because had I read the ingredients of  Mahou's "suitable for celiacs" "sin gluten" beer I would have noticed that it was made from cabada (Spanish for barley)...hope this helps...        
×
×
  • Create New...