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

Help - Sos


anniej55

Recommended Posts

anniej55 Apprentice

Hi All,

I was told by my Primary Care (in May) that I had celiacs; this was from bloodwork the GI did and I assumed that they conferred (they are colleagues and she got me in to see him). I never called the GI for test results because of what the PC told me. I had follow up appt with GI on Monday and he informed me that I DO NOT have celiac disease. Like, hello. I've been gluten-free since May/June. He's doing a biopsy in September to confirm the diagnosis, so I am (happily for now) eating normally.

My numbers?

Antigliadan AB Panel:

Antibody, IGA - 23 (normal 0-19 units)

Antibody, IGG - 54 (normal, 0-19 units)

Immunoglobulins (serum)

IGM 386 (normal 48-271)

IGA 418 (normal 81-463)

IGG 1337 (normal 694 - 1618)

He said my tTg was 3

I do have ITP, an autoimmune disease, and NASH (liver). Have been tested for leukemia & lymphoma and came back negative.

You all know more about this than I do - what gives? Did the gluten-free diet make me feel any better? I was never really sick. I will say that something I was eating that was gluten-free (muffins, etc) was causing me to bloat and have a rash; it has gotten significantly better in the past 3 days of eating.

I see my PC tomorrow and will run this by her, but I am more then a little reluctant to take her word on anything right now.

Thanks!

Ann


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Jnkmnky Collaborator

I am sorry to say, your numbers suggest you do Celiac. I'm sorry because your doctor sounds confused as well as confusing. This is no way to regain your health. Good luck. :(

KaitiUSA Enthusiast

Your numbers do suggest a problem with gluten. They don't come back elevated for no reason.

Can't really tell with symptoms..some people just never get symptoms with it.

What you could do is get tested for what you did last time and see if those levels that were high before went down since you have been on the diet.

anniej55 Apprentice

Isn't the Ttg the bottom line for diagnosis? (other then biopsy). And that was low, which is what he made his diagnosis on. And would the other numbers be high due to another autoimmune disease? Just curious.

Sigh. I dont know what to think/do now. This doctor was recommended as a celiac doctor.

Ann

alisonsf Newbie

Hi Ann,

So was your Ttg negative? That one's very specific for celiac disease. With the positive antigliadan numbers you could very likely have a problem with gluten, but not have celiac disease. There is another very specific test, endomysial Iga, that you might want to get once you've been back on gluten for a while.

I was in a similar position (test-wise) and had genetic testing to help rule out celiac disease since it was important to me to have a definitive diagnosis. The test came back negative and I am told I now have less than a 1% chance of having the disease. I suspect something's up, maybe an intolerance, maybe something even more exotic than celiac disease, maybe nothing. I'm back on gluten for a month or two and plan to get my Ttg and EmA testing done repeated. I've got some good doctors supporting me in all this.

The thing about the genetic testing is that something like a third of the population has the markers, so I would think the test would only be valuable for ruling out celiac disease. I understand that the biopsy is still the gold standard, despite the fact that many doctors will diagnose without it.

Good luck to you. The on again off again diagnosis is quite a roller coaster, isn't it?

Alison

KaitiUSA Enthusiast

The tTG is like the best test BUT it is specifically there to detect damage. The EMA is another good test and that is also used to detect damage. If there is none there yet then that would come back negative.

The IgA and IgG are not as accurate but they are still helpful and are used to detect the sensitivity to gluten. This is usually one of the first things you see positive.

anniej55 Apprentice
Hi Ann,

So was your Ttg negative? That one's very specific for celiac disease. With the positive antigliadan numbers you could very likely have a problem with gluten, but not have celiac disease. There is another very specific test, endomysial Iga, that you might want to get once you've been back on gluten for a while.

I was in a similar position (test-wise) and had genetic testing to help rule out celiac disease since it was important to me to have a definitive diagnosis. The test came back negative and I am told I now have less than a 1% chance of having the disease. I suspect something's up, maybe an intolerance, maybe something even more exotic than celiac disease, maybe nothing. I'm back on gluten for a month or two and plan to get my Ttg and EmA testing done repeated. I've got some good doctors supporting me in all this.

The thing about the genetic testing is that something like a third of the population has the markers, so I would think the test would only be valuable for ruling out celiac disease. I understand that the biopsy is still the gold standard, despite the fact that many doctors will diagnose without it.

Good luck to you. The on again off again diagnosis is quite a roller coaster, isn't it?

Alison

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

Alison,

My tTg was 3 ... he said low, so no celiac. And yes, something is probably up. Maybe an intolerance. EmA - I'll have to look that up. I've had a battery of blood tests (9 vials at one time! - usually 3 or 4 is once every 3 weeks or so) so I'm sure I've been tested for everything.

I'm on gluten for the biopsy .... but I really don't eat that much of it normally. And having a problem with gluten and NOT having celiac disease is OK with me!

Ann


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



PreOptMegs Explorer

My doctor told me I didn't have celiac disease either because my biopsy came back negative. I KNOW I am gluten intolerant, though, which may be what you are. If I would have listened to my doctor, I would be eating as much "whole grain wheat" as possible because he diagnosed me with IBS. No offense to him, but I know my body and I know he is WRONG!!!!!!!!!I didn't lose weight when eating gluten, I gained it. Anyway, I am finally back to normal now that I am eating gluten-free

anniej55 Apprentice
My doctor told me I didn't have celiac disease either because my biopsy came back negative.  I KNOW I am gluten intolerant, though, which may be what you are.  If I would have listened to my doctor, I would be eating as much "whole grain wheat" as possible because he diagnosed me with IBS.  No offense to him, but I know my body and I know he is WRONG!!!!!!!!!I didn't lose weight when eating gluten, I gained it.  Anyway, I am finally back to normal now that I am eating gluten-free

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

Have I missed something - why would gaining weight when eating gluten-free indicate anything? Other then the fact that I was hungry all the time, so I ate more.... and I ate worse. Potatoes to fill me up (fattening, I know) .... hate fruit, so candy ....

I was thinking IBS too, since I've always had a touch of constipation/diarrhea at different times in my life.

I just don't know which way to turn anymore.

Ann

cdford Contributor

Many GIs will not diagnose celiac disease without a positive biopsy. I had one who looked at the blood work and did not see a reason to put me through the biopsy because I was already gluten-free and doing so well. An insurance change forced me to another one who was adamant that it could not be called celiac disease because I had not had a positive biopsy done. It did not matter that I had accidentally gotten glutened and was sick as a dog because of it.

Guest nini
Have I missed something - why would gaining weight when eating gluten-free indicate anything?  Other then the fact that I was hungry all the time, so I ate more.... and I ate worse.  Potatoes to fill me up (fattening, I know) .... hate fruit, so candy ....

I was thinking IBS too, since I've always had a touch of constipation/diarrhea at different times in my life. 

I just don't know which way to turn anymore.

Ann

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

I think she said she gained weight eating Gluten. NOT Gluten FREE. When I ate gluten I gained so much weight. I couldn't lose weight at all no matter how little I ate, because my body was reacting badly to the gluten. Since I've been gluten-free a little over 2 years now, I've lost about 80 pounds altogether and the only thing I'm doing different is eating gluten-free.

anniej55 Apprentice

It wasn't that he wouldn't diagnose it - he felt that the Ttg was too low to diagnose it, but would do the biopsy to double check. He was confident that it was not celiac disease ....

anniej55 Apprentice
I think she said she gained weight eating Gluten. NOT Gluten FREE. When I ate gluten I gained so much weight. I couldn't lose weight at all no matter how little I ate, because my body was reacting badly to the gluten.  Since I've been gluten-free a little over 2 years now, I've lost about 80 pounds altogether and the only thing I'm doing different is eating gluten-free.

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

I stand corrected - she gained when eating gluten. Thanks for pointing that out. I gained when I ate gluten-free .... and got bloated. Now that I'm eating normally the bloating is gone ..... leave it to me to be weird.

Guest nini

you may have other food intolerances. It is worth keeping a food diary and tracking any and all reactions (or none) from whatever you eat. You may see a pattern start to emerge. Just a thought.

anniej55 Apprentice
you may have other food intolerances. It is worth keeping a food diary and tracking any and all reactions (or none) from whatever you eat. You may see a pattern start to emerge. Just a thought.

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

I had actually been considering doing that before the GI doc told me it wasn't celiacs. It was definately something gluten-free doing it to me .... I was eating the english muffins and corn muffin (George's). Rest of the time it was meat, potatoes, etc. Normal stuff. Feel way better now .... either that or I'm trying to convince myself of it :D

Guest nini

you could be allergic to corn. It's used in a lot of gluten free products. Corn is also very hard to digest.

drjmarkusic Newbie

The absolute diagnostic tool is the EGD and the biopsy of the villi. If this hasn't been done I would suggest it be scheduled.

anniej55 Apprentice
The absolute diagnostic tool is the EGD and the biopsy of the villi. If this hasn't been done I would suggest it be scheduled.

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

Hi,

I have a biopsy scheduled for September. I don't know about the EGD - it was mentioned. I haven't had any problem eating normally ... but I know that it might not be affecting my stomach at this point in time. I think my biggest mistake was taking my primary care's diagnosis and not calling the GI for the blood results (in May). Come to find out, she didn't even know what a tTg was ....

thanks for the advice. I'll let you all know what the results are.

Ann

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. - SamAlvi replied to SamAlvi's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      High TTG-IgG and Normal TTG-IgA

    2. - trents replied to SamAlvi's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      High TTG-IgG and Normal TTG-IgA

    3. - GlorietaKaro replied to GlorietaKaro's topic in Super Sensitive People
      7

      Am I nuts?

    4. - lalan45 replied to GlorietaKaro's topic in Super Sensitive People
      7

      Am I nuts?

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

    • Total Members
      132,841
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

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

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • SamAlvi
      Hi, thank you for the reply. Unfortunately, no other antibody tests were ordered. I am a 32-year-old male. About two months ago, I ate pancakes and then developed severe diarrhea that lasted the entire day. At night, I became unconscious due to fluid loss and was admitted to the ER, where I received IV fluids. Two days later, I ate bread again and once more developed severe diarrhea. I ended up in the ER again and received IV fluids. In my country, Pakistan, doctors are unfortunately not very thorough, so they treated me for a stomach infection. I visited three or four doctors, including a gastroenterologist, but it seemed like they just wanted to keep me on medications and IV fluids. Eventually, I did some digging myself and started connecting the dots. For years, I’ve had excessive gas buildup and frequent loose stools, but I never paid much attention to it. I also cannot easily digest dairy products. Two years ago, I had a CBC test that showed iron deficiency. My doctor told me to eat more meat and said it was nothing serious. However, for the past five years, I’ve also had severe motion sickness, which I never experienced before. Whenever I get on a bus or in a car, I sometimes lose consciousness for 10–20 seconds and wake up sweaty, and occasionally I feel the need to vomit. After more research on the internet, I came across gluten and celiac disease, so I got two related tests (TTG-IgA & TTG IgG) done along with a stool test and another CBC. The stool test showed weakly positive blood. Ever since eating those pancakes and bread, I’ve had a burning sensation in my gut. My doctor reviewed my tests, he told me to completely stop eating gluten and started me on IV fluids for 20 days, saying that I had severe inflammation in my gut. It has now been two months since I quit gluten, and I’m still not sure whether this is celiac disease or gluten intolerance. I don’t really trust doctors in Pakistan, so I thought I might get some help here.
    • trents
      Welcome to the celiac.com community, @SamAlvi! Were there any other antibody tests ordered? Particularly, was there a "total IGA" test ordered to check for IGA deficiency. When people are IGA deficient, celiac panel IGA test scores, such as the TTG-IGA, are likely not valid. If a total IGA test was not ordered, I would request such to be done. Note: "Total IGA" goes by other names as well. I will include a primer on celiac disease antibody testing which does a good job in covering the nomenclature variations connected with the various tests. Elevated IGG scores can certainly indicate celiac disease but they are more likely than elevated IGA tests to be caused by something else.  
    • GlorietaKaro
      Thank you— yes, valid and essential— The issue either doctors is that every one I have tried to talk to about this has essentially rolled their eyes and dismissed me as a hypochondriac, which gets discouraging. I believe a diagnosis would help me to be taken seriously by doctors as well as being validating, but can carry on without it.    There are many, probably most people in my area of my age and gender, who avoid gluten, but many just avoid it casually— eating the occasional plate of wheat pasta or a delicious-looking dessert, or baking cookies with wheat flour for gatherings.  That is not an option for me. I don’t eat other people’s cooking or go to restaurants that do not have strict cross- contamination procedures. It can be boring and lonely, and people do look at me as if I am being a bit dramatic but weeks of symptoms after a single small exposure has taught me to respect my experience.    Thank you very much for your response— sometimes I just need to hear that I am not crazy—
    • lalan45
      You’re not crazy—some people have severe neurological and physical reactions to gluten, not just digestive issues. While testing can be tricky without eating gluten, documenting symptoms and seeing a specialist familiar with atypical celiac or gluten-related disorders can help. Your reactions are real, and it’s valid to be cautious.
    • SamAlvi
      Anti TTG (IgA) 2.430 U/mL Anti TTG (IgG) 288.2 U/mL
×
×
  • 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.