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My Scope Came Back Negitive


Sarah B

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Sarah B Apprentice

This summer I had the bloood test done for celiacs and it came back positive. Even this month when my GI doctor looked at he he said that I probably had celiacs. By the time I had recieved my results from the blood test I was already away at school and didn't have time to drive an hour to a GI doctor. So I started my gluten-free diet and have been on one since. In order to make my family doctor happy I scheduled an appointment with a GI Doctor, had the scope done. Yesterday the doctors nurse called and told me that the results were negitive and I don't have celiacs. The doctor doesn't know why my blood results were postive.

I'm a hunderd percent better on this new diet. I can think better, excerise better. I feel better all around. Dos this scope mean that I don't have celiacs?


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lynnelise Apprentice

To be accurate the scope needs to be done while you are still ingesting gluten. How long were you on the gluten free diet?

ravenwoodglass Mentor

No the negative scope does not mean you are not celiac. Your blood tests were postive because you are forming antibodies to gluten and the diet has healed your small intestine. You need to be actively consuming gluten for the scope to have any chance of a positive and even on a full gluten diet the false negative rate is still rather high. With your positive blood work and the resolution of symptoms gluten-free you have your diagnosis. You might want to have the blood tests rerun. With your improvement and a decrease in blood antibody levels if you need a doctor derived diagnosis for any reason that may get you one.

Sarah B Apprentice

I've been on a gluten free diet since september. so about 3 to 4 months.

Could my intestine have healed the quickly?

My dad and I went and talked to my GI doctor today and he was insinstant that I didn't have it. He basicly told me that because my scope came back negative I didn't have it and there was no way I could have had it.

That it was all in my head.

according to my blood results

my Gliadin IGA was 66.5

and my Gliadin IGG was 59.2

Aren't they suppose to be below 20?

ravenwoodglass Mentor

I've been on a gluten free diet since september. so about 3 to 4 months.

Could my intestine have healed the quickly?

My dad and I went and talked to my GI doctor today and he was insinstant that I didn't have it. He basicly told me that because my scope came back negative I didn't have it and there was no way I could have had it.

That it was all in my head.

according to my blood results

my Gliadin IGA was 66.5

and my Gliadin IGG was 59.2

Aren't they suppose to be below 20?

Did you tell the doctor that you had been gluten free for that long? Yes your intestines could have healed in that time. Please stick with the diet. Your panel numbers are quite high for a reason. I am sorry you had such a lousy doctor. By the way your family should also get panels done as celiac is strongly genetic.

Skylark Collaborator

This summer I had the bloood test done for celiacs and it came back positive. Even this month when my GI doctor looked at he he said that I probably had celiacs. By the time I had recieved my results from the blood test I was already away at school and didn't have time to drive an hour to a GI doctor. So I started my gluten-free diet and have been on one since. In order to make my family doctor happy I scheduled an appointment with a GI Doctor, had the scope done. Yesterday the doctors nurse called and told me that the results were negitive and I don't have celiacs. The doctor doesn't know why my blood results were postive.

I'm a hunderd percent better on this new diet. I can think better, excerise better. I feel better all around. Dos this scope mean that I don't have celiacs?

Going gluten free for a few months could have given you a clean scope if you only had lymphocytic infiltration, which is the mildest form of damage. There is also growing evidence that people with celiac antibodies and a negative scope are still celiac. It's just that the autoimmunity isn't severe enough to give a positive biopsy. Doctors don't seem to be familiar with the research. If you feel better on the diet, the safest thing is to assume you're celiac and stick to the diet.

Doctors that tell people stuff is in their head make me so mad. They did the same to my mom, who is negative both blood and biopsy, yet she got rid of decades of IBS by going gluten-free.

(And psssst... It's "celiac". No letter s at the end. ;))

Sarah B Apprentice

Going gluten free for a few months could have given you a clean scope if you only had lymphocytic infiltration, which is the mildest form of damage. There is also growing evidence that people with celiac antibodies and a negative scope are still celiac. It's just that the autoimmunity isn't severe enough to give a positive biopsy. Doctors don't seem to be familiar with the research. If you feel better on the diet, the safest thing is to assume you're celiac and stick to the diet.

Doctors that tell people stuff is in their head make me so mad. They did the same to my mom, who is negative both blood and biopsy, yet she got rid of decades of IBS by going gluten-free.

(And psssst... It's "celiac". No letter s at the end. ;))

Can you cite where you found this information? I couldn't anything on it online.

Thanks


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Skylark Collaborator

Can you cite where you found this information? I couldn't anything on it online.

Thanks

For starters, there is a brand new article that was all over the news a couple weeks ago. It's in last month's J. Proteomic Research. It shows similar metabolomics between biopsy-diagnosed celiacs and people with the antibodies but negative biopsy.

Open Original Shared Link

The whole idea of latent celiac has been strongly supported by Markku Mäki, a leading Finnish celiac researcher. I saw most of his data and the idea of a broad spectrum of genetic gluten intolerance in a talk but you should be able to find his abstracts in Pubmed because he publishes a lot. He had a prospective study where he showed EMA+, negative biopsy folks converting to Marsh 2 and Marsh 3 celiac over a few years, among other data. Pubmed is at Open Original Shared Link and you just search his name to see lots of interesting research.

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