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Very Mild Case?


domesticactivist

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domesticactivist Collaborator

I'm wondering if anyone has confirmed Dermititis herpitiformis which is not symmetrical or widespread. My daughter is about to undergo some testing for celiac, and one of the things that could point to it is that she has always had little itchy spots. Sometimes they look like bug bites, but they are more like a blister. They are isolated, (just one blister in a spot), she scratches them, and they are usually on her ankles, face (hairline or chin), or upper chest.


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mushroom Proficient

My hub only ever had the one outbreak, about an inch-long line of vertical blisters starting just below the hairline on one side of his forehead. It was enough to put the fear of God in him about cheating on the diet, so was a good thing. :D

eatmeat4good Enthusiast

My first sores were very much one tiny very painful spot. Mosquito bite looking. Took forever to heal. That one would heal and another would appear. Later got one large spot on leg...same pain...same took forever to heal. That one took one year. Later outbreak on face. Several small painful spots that grew larger as the glutening went on and before the diagnosis. My son had "mosquito bites" on his legs that were itchy and painful and didn't heal. Here, then there. It all went away when the gluten did. No antibiotic or antifungal did anything for them but sometimes they would disappear altogether, only to reappear later. This was our experience.

rosetapper23 Explorer

I can only address symmetry. I think very few studies (if any) have been done on DH, so this assumption that it has to be symmetrical is not accurate. For my adult son and me, we both break out on our faces (jaw, chin, and down the sides of the neck). However, I also break out on the sole of my RIGHT foot and on my LEFT hand. My son, on the other hand, breaks out on the sole of his LEFT food and on his RIGHT hand, just the opposite of my outbreaks. Very strange "symmetry," for sure.

Skylark Collaborator

I'm wondering if anyone has confirmed Dermititis herpitiformis which is not symmetrical or widespread. My daughter is about to undergo some testing for celiac, and one of the things that could point to it is that she has always had little itchy spots. Sometimes they look like bug bites, but they are more like a blister. They are isolated, (just one blister in a spot), she scratches them, and they are usually on her ankles, face (hairline or chin), or upper chest.

I have one area along my right index finger used to get intensely itchy and would sometimes have a blister or two. It baffled a doctor because there is no reason for me to have herpes whitlow and neither of us thought of DH. I'm pretty sure it's DH because it hasn't blistered in a few years now and when I got stuck eating CC'd food over a weekend trip it started itching intensely.

TexasLady54 Newbie

I have one area along my right index finger used to get intensely itchy and would sometimes have a blister or two. It baffled a doctor because there is no reason for me to have herpes whitlow and neither of us thought of DH. I'm pretty sure it's DH because it hasn't blistered in a few years now and when I got stuck eating CC'd food over a weekend trip it started itching intensely.

I have had Dermatitis Herpetiformis off and on again for about 10 years or longer. It does get blistery and insanely itchy. I have never had the perfectly symetrical pattern but maybe one elbow, one finger, one knee and then other times it would be both elbows, both knees. It's just a crazy disease. It waxes and wanes though and sometimes I can go for a period of weeks or months without a breakout. I have scratched until I bled. Now when the itchy patches come, I use an Rx from my Dermatologist, Pramazone lotion (which actually dries up the blisters) given a few days time.

Muffy Rookie

I also get the singular bumps, like a weird bug bite. I called them volcanoes for the longest time because they would erupt as I scratched and scracthed and would take forever to heal, my scratching didn't help. wink.gif

I get them on my hands, wrists, forearms, upper cest, neck, face, and knees. There is never any kind of symmetrical pattern. I have an itchy spot on one foot that comes and goes and drives me crazy, it is red sometimes. I never thought it was related but by reading the other replies I see that the mystery is finally solved. For a while I even thought maybe a I had a single paralyzed scabbie living there or something... blink.gif


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shopgirl Contributor

That explains the weird, itchy spots I would get on one of my fingers that would come and go. I always assumed it was a tiny patch of eczema.

  • 2 weeks later...
Cypressmyst Explorer

I also get the singular bumps, like a weird bug bite. I called them volcanoes for the longest time because they would erupt as I scratched and scracthed and would take forever to heal, my scratching didn't help. wink.gif

I get them on my hands, wrists, forearms, upper cest, neck, face, and knees. There is never any kind of symmetrical pattern. I have an itchy spot on one foot that comes and goes and drives me crazy, it is red sometimes. I never thought it was related but by reading the other replies I see that the mystery is finally solved. For a while I even thought maybe a I had a single paralyzed scabbie living there or something... blink.gif

I just have to say that I love the image of a single paralyzed scabbie. :lol:

My DH is sometimes on my chest, sometimes on my back, stomach, arms, jawline, face, and is sometimes like a little zit, sometimes just red, sometimes itchy, sometimes not. No pattern, then again why should there be one? :P

It is how I know I am glutened as it always always shows up in addition to the brain fog, migraines, cecum pain etc..

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      You've done an excellent job of meticulously tracking the rash's unpredictable behavior, from its symmetrical spread and stubborn scabbing to the potential triggers you've identified, like the asthma medication and dietary changes. It's particularly telling that the rash seems to flare with wheat consumption, even though your initial blood test was negative—as you've noted, being off wheat before a test can sometimes lead to a false negative, and your description of the other symptoms—joint pain, brain fog, stomach issues—is very compelling. The symmetry of the rash is a crucial detail that often points toward an internal cause, such as an autoimmune response or a systemic reaction, rather than just an external irritant like a plant or mites. I hope your doctor tomorrow takes the time to listen carefully to all of this evidence you've gathered and works with you to find some real answers and effective relief. Don't be discouraged if the rash fluctuates; your detailed history is the most valuable tool you have for getting an accurate diagnosis.
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