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

Confused With Recent Labs


alevoy18

Recommended Posts

alevoy18 Explorer

Originally in 2009, I had a tTg test come back at 60 (ref range under 20). After this I had a biopsy which showed moderate villous atrophy and increased IEL (Marsh 3B). I was diagnosed with Celiac Disease on Nov 15, 2009. So I have been gluten free for about 15 months. Recently I have been seeing a neurologist due to autonomic issues. He told me usually the Antigliadin antibodies will give a guideline if there is nerve damage. The test came back as:

Anti IGA - 11 (ref range < 20)

Anti IGG - 23 (ref range < 20)

Does this show that I am following my gluten free diet well, since my antibodies are low? The thing that confuses me is I was worried some gluten was sneaking in because last month my tTG came back at 56, which is a small fall from 60 over such a long period of time. Why would tTG still be slightly high but IGA is normal? My total IGA is normal as well, had that tested recently. Could Celiac have been the wrong diagnosis?

Thanks a lot.

Adam


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



sb2178 Enthusiast

I'd bet on continued low exposure. The tests are very convincingly positive.

You've probably read it, but...

- drop processed foods

- drop dairy

- consider avoiding soy

- replace items that are potential for contamination like scratched pans/plastic/woods

- toiletries

- workplace exposure?

- pet foods?

- shared kitchen contamination?

- contamination from eating out?

alevoy18 Explorer

Thanks for the advice, I will take a look into what you mentioned.

What I really curious about is that most people say anti IGA will show you compliance to diet. That came back normal. But why would tTG still be high, shouldn't those two both one way or another if you have normal total IGA levels. IGA and even IGG are not that bad, but tTG is still 3 times the normal limit.

Thanks again.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

I'd bet on continued low exposure. The tests are very convincingly positive.

You've probably read it, but...

- drop processed foods

- drop dairy

- consider avoiding soy

- replace items that are potential for contamination like scratched pans/plastic/woods

- toiletries

- workplace exposure?

- pet foods?

- shared kitchen contamination?

- contamination from eating out?

Ditto. Also some of us with neurological issues have to be very strict to have those resolve. It does sound like you have gluten sneaking in somewhere. Do you have a significant other who eats gluten? If you do are you having him/her brush their teeth before intimate kissing? If not you should as that can gluten you. Also you should avoid baking with wheat flour for others as that can be an issue because it becomes airborne and is inhaled in.

alevoy18 Explorer

Thanks again for the reply. I didn't know about the airborne issue. My fiance is on a gluten diet, but we have seperate everything. I do cook for her sometimes though, as I made her cookies today actually. I will have to remind myself of this in the future. Thank you both for the tips.

I never had my antigliadin antibodies tested originally, I just had tTG and then the biopsy. Here are all the tests I've done and the order:

Nov 2009

-------

tTG 60 (range <20)

biopsy (Marsh 3B)

GLUTEN FREE DIET STARTED

Dec 2010

--------

tTG 56 (range <20)

Total Serum IGA/IGG - Both normal

Jan 2011

---------

Antigliadin IGA 11 (range <20)

Antigliadin IGG 23 (range <23)

I would think if my tTG is still high a little over a month ago, my anti IGA should be high as well. Also if I was still getting gluten in there, wouldn't the IGA be up as well since I am not IGA deficient? Also since even my IGG is not too high, just a little bit, why would my tTG still be triple the normal? Sorry, I just wanted to brain storm and get some ideas to why. Thanks a lot.

cassP Contributor

Originally in 2009, I had a tTg test come back at 60 (ref range under 20). After this I had a biopsy which showed moderate villous atrophy and increased IEL (Marsh 3B). I was diagnosed with Celiac Disease on Nov 15, 2009. So I have been gluten free for about 15 months. Recently I have been seeing a neurologist due to autonomic issues. He told me usually the Antigliadin antibodies will give a guideline if there is nerve damage. The test came back as:

Anti IGA - 11 (ref range < 20)

Anti IGG - 23 (ref range < 20)

Does this show that I am following my gluten free diet well, since my antibodies are low? The thing that confuses me is I was worried some gluten was sneaking in because last month my tTG came back at 56, which is a small fall from 60 over such a long period of time. Why would tTG still be slightly high but IGA is normal? My total IGA is normal as well, had that tested recently. Could Celiac have been the wrong diagnosis?

Thanks a lot.

Adam

no, your Celiac dx is the right one. im not sure why your ttg only dropped to 56... you must still be getting gluten in somehow... i hope you can figure out if you are.

and to clarify- your ANTIGLIADIN IGA were normal. and your ANTIGLIADIN IGG were slightly elevated. these are completely different antibodies than the TTG.

now your TTG test & result is also in the form of IGA or IGG.. but i dont see that on your result.

TTG Iga & TTG Igg are the Tissue Transglutamase Antibodies- and they really have nothing to do with your Antigliadin numbers. they both involve gluten, but they are different antibodies.

did that make sense? so ya, you could totally have high ttg (iga or igg), and have normal antigliadin iga and elevated antigliadin igg.

Jestgar Rising Star

Think of of this way:

The tTg measures how much gut damage you have (the transglutaminase is leaking into your blood stream) and the anti gluten/gliadin measures how much gluten you're eating. So you've stopped eating gluten (good) and your gut is just now starting to heal.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Archived

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

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

    • Total Members
      132,658
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Display4
    Newest Member
    Display4
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @yellowstone! The most common ones seem to be dairy (casein), oats, eggs, soy and corn. "Formed" meat products (because of the "meat glue" used to hold their shape) is a problem for some. But it can be almost anything on an individual basis as your sensitivity to rice proves, since rice is uncommonly a "cross reactor" for celiacs. Some celiacs seem to not do well with any cereal grains.
    • yellowstone
      What foods can trigger a response in people with gluten sensitivity? I've read that there are foods that, although they don't contain gluten, can cause problems for people with gluten sensitivity because they contain proteins similar to gluten that trigger a response in the body. I've seen that other cereals are included: corn, rice... also chicken, casein. I would like to know what other foods can cause this reaction, and if you have more information on the subject, I would like to know about it. Right now, I react very badly to rice and corn. Thank you.
    • Jmartes71
      Shingles is dormant and related to chicken pox when one has had in the past.Shingles comes out when stress is heightened.I had my 3rd Shingles in 2023.
    • knitty kitty
      Here's one more that shows Lysine also helps alleviate pain! Exploring the Analgesic Potential of L-Lysine: Molecular Mechanisms, Preclinical Evidence, and Implications for Pharmaceutical Pain Therapy https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12114920/
    • Flash1970
      Thank you for the links to the articles.  Interesting reading. I'll be telling my brother in law because he has a lot of pain
×
×
  • 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.