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

Genetic Testing Inconclusive?


luluo

Recommended Posts

luluo Newbie

I have been gluten-free since 2004. Been doing well but have had health problems recently that have led to me want to have a firm diagnosis if celiac disease if possible. Blood tests were negative, but I am gluten-free so I expected that. So I paid big bucks to have a HLA DQ test done. GI Doc said that this should give us a definitive answer. I spoke with the nurse practitioner today and she told me that the results were inconclusive because I tested positive for one gene but not the other and in order to be considered celiac disease I have to have both genes be positive but to be considered negative I need both to be negative. I am really disappointed that this so-called "definitive test" is not definitive at all. Has anyone else had this happen? Any insight?

GI now wants to do an upper endoscopy. I believe I'd have to get back on gluten for this test, correct? The Nurse Practitioner said that I wouldn't but I dont see how that would work. Also, aren't there lots of false negatives with the upper endoscopy. Not sure it is worth going through all that.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



domesticactivist Collaborator

Even if you had both genes the DNA test would be inconclusive. You can have the genes but not develop the disease. However, having one gene means it is *possible* that you have celiac. (Some people still have problems without the genes, too, btw, but that's another story.)

With the endoscopy, you do need to be eating gluten. One or two days (or weeks) of eating gluten is not enough to be confident in the results. I've heard varying amounts of time and quantities required - it's not an exact science. Your dr also needs to take many biopsies from different areas of the small intestine. Even then, sometimes people test negative despite damage because the biopsies taken did not come from the visibly damaged part of the intestine.

If you have problems when eating gluten that are resolved when you aren't eating gluten, that seems like a good enough reason not to eat it to me.

What are the reasons that you need an official diagnosis?

GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

I have been gluten-free since 2004. Been doing well but have had health problems recently that have led to me want to have a firm diagnosis if celiac disease if possible. Blood tests were negative, but I am gluten-free so I expected that. So I paid big bucks to have a HLA DQ test done. GI Doc said that this should give us a definitive answer. I spoke with the nurse practitioner today and she told me that the results were inconclusive because I tested positive for one gene but not the other and in order to be considered celiac disease I have to have both genes be positive but to be considered negative I need both to be negative. I am really disappointed that this so-called "definitive test" is not definitive at all. Has anyone else had this happen? Any insight?

GI now wants to do an upper endoscopy. I believe I'd have to get back on gluten for this test, correct? The Nurse Practitioner said that I wouldn't but I dont see how that would work. Also, aren't there lots of false negatives with the upper endoscopy. Not sure it is worth going through all that.

Your NP and GI know NOTHING! Oh my, I can't beleive they said the genetic test would be "definitive". First of all havign the most common genes does not diagnose celiac. 30% of the population have the most common genes but only 1% of the population develops active celiac disease. Further complicating this whole thing, what they told you about only having one is completely wrong as well. There are people that are diagnosed via blood test and biopsy that don't have EITHER of the most common genes. So they are completely all wet that you have to have both!

You are right in that you would have to go back to eating gluten to do the endscopy. You need to be back on it for at least 3 months and be eatign the equivalent of 3-4 slices of bread a day. If you have really bad symptoms from eating gluten however is that really worth it? If you do want to doa gluten challenge and retest I strongly suggest to find a new doctor. The one you currently have seems to just want to make money off of you or is just completely ignorant about the tests, which means he may dso the biopsy wrong!

luluo Newbie

Thank you both for the explanations. I've gotten better info from you than from the GI and staff. I'm very irritated that he made it seem that this genetic test would give me the answers I was looking for. Should have known better. The reason I was looking for a firm dx of celiac was to aid my rheumatologist in my treatment. I have a positive ana and we were hoping to rule in celiac as a cause of that or rule it out. Not that it makes much difference except that if you are labeled with one condition, the docs tend to use that as an explanation for everything and rule out other causes.

Thanks so much for the quick responses. I think I'm going to skip the upper endoscopy. I don't want to load myself up on gluten again. Not worth it to me. I'll just stay gluten-free and hopefully that will be good enough for my rheumatologist.

GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

Thank you both for the explanations. I've gotten better info from you than from the GI and staff. I'm very irritated that he made it seem that this genetic test would give me the answers I was looking for. Should have known better. The reason I was looking for a firm dx of celiac was to aid my rheumatologist in my treatment. I have a positive ana and we were hoping to rule in celiac as a cause of that or rule it out. Not that it makes much difference except that if you are labeled with one condition, the docs tend to use that as an explanation for everything and rule out other causes.

Thanks so much for the quick responses. I think I'm going to skip the upper endoscopy. I don't want to load myself up on gluten again. Not worth it to me. I'll just stay gluten-free and hopefully that will be good enough for my rheumatologist.

Are they looking for RA or Lupus or somehtign else specific with the ANA test? This thread might be helpful to you:

A lot of us seem to have positive ANA's but it may or may not have anything to do with celiac. What are your symptoms that lead them to do the ANA test?

GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

Also wanted to add that if you have celiac diseaes that would NOT rule out your having other autoimmune diseases which could cause the positive ANA. The opposite is actually true. If you have celiac you are MORE LIKELY to have another autoimmune disease as well such as lupus, hashimotos, RA, etc. So whether you have celiac or not doesn't really matter if you are having new symptoms. Your doctors should be looking for additional causes if you are sure your new symptoms are not related to gluten cc.

luluo Newbie

Are they looking for RA or Lupus or somehtign else specific with the ANA test? This thread might be helpful to you:

A lot of us seem to have positive ANA's but it may or may not have anything to do with celiac. What are your symptoms that lead them to do the ANA test?

Extreme fatigue, all over chronic pain since I was in my teens, migrianes, numbness in the extremeties, breathlessness, palpitations, extreme feelings of hot and cold, etc., that have all gotten much worse in the last few years to the point where my life was being greatly impacted. Yes, my rheumatologist was thinking Lupus or RA as well as a few other things but all tests came back okay.

One thing that was certain was that we discovered I had a congenital heart defect (undetected for 34 years). It was fixed 2.5 ago and we are all hopeful that some or many of my symptoms will resolve as I heal. Since discovery of the heart defect, my rheumy was thinking fibro (or fibro like symptoms) brought on by the stress my body was under due to the heart defect. (I had a 1cm hole between the right and left atrium and one of the pulmonary veins was going to the right chamber instead of the left.) My rheumy she says she won't rule anything out and we will just take things one day at a time.

In the meantime, I had had this genetic test for celiac done back in April and just got the results back and was surprised by the results. Though after reading the posts here, my results weren't all that surprising.

What led me to go gluten-free in 2004 was I was having lots of GI problems, lost a lot of weight in a short amount of time and after tests, colonoscopy, and a dairy elimination, I did a gluten elimination and got better very quickly. I've been gluten-free ever since. Really, I have had so much going on medically, over the last couple of years especially, that I'm just trying to piece the puzzle together to improve my quality of life.

Thanks so much for responding. I appreciate the help. :)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



GlutenFreeManna Rising Star

Extreme fatigue, all over chronic pain since I was in my teens, migrianes, numbness in the extremeties, breathlessness, palpitations, extreme feelings of hot and cold, etc., that have all gotten much worse in the last few years to the point where my life was being greatly impacted. Yes, my rheumatologist was thinking Lupus or RA as well as a few other things but all tests came back okay.

One thing that was certain was that we discovered I had a congenital heart defect (undetected for 34 years). It was fixed 2.5 ago and we are all hopeful that some or many of my symptoms will resolve as I heal. Since discovery of the heart defect, my rheumy was thinking fibro (or fibro like symptoms) brought on by the stress my body was under due to the heart defect. (I had a 1cm hole between the right and left atrium and one of the pulmonary veins was going to the right chamber instead of the left.) My rheumy she says she won't rule anything out and we will just take things one day at a time.

In the meantime, I had had this genetic test for celiac done back in April and just got the results back and was surprised by the results. Though after reading the posts here, my results weren't all that surprising.

What led me to go gluten-free in 2004 was I was having lots of GI problems, lost a lot of weight in a short amount of time and after tests, colonoscopy, and a dairy elimination, I did a gluten elimination and got better very quickly. I've been gluten-free ever since. Really, I have had so much going on medically, over the last couple of years especially, that I'm just trying to piece the puzzle together to improve my quality of life.

Thanks so much for responding. I appreciate the help. :)

Two suggestions:

Have your thyroid tested and also consider that you may have additional food intolerances. Your symptoms are very similar to what I had prior to going gluten-free soy free and dairy free. Anytime I get a little bit of soy I get extremely tired and have muscle aches and pain. Soybean oil can give me an instant migraine. I also had breathing difficulties all my life and racing heartbeat which turned out to be a milk allergy (not just and intolerance). I didn't figure out it was a milk allergy until my symptoms got so severe that now I have to carry an epi-pen. The one symptom that you mentioned that I still get is the hot and cold thing. I think it may be due to my thyroid (which is underactive but not enough to be diagnosed as hypothyroid yet). I made a post a while ago however asking if others have extreme temperature changes (like hot flashes and chills) and also sensitivity to temperatures (I cannot tolerate very hot whether). Many others said they had those symptoms as well. So they very well could be somethign to do with celiac messing up our temperature regulation. I also often wonder about whether I could be going through early menopause due to the years of undiagnosed celiac damage. Celiac is connected to infertility in women that do not get diagnosed or don't stick to a gluten-free diet. But I don't know if there has been any research yet on how it effects our hormone production.

ETA: Another thing that you should have checked is your vitamin levels-- Vitamin D, Vitamin B12, Potassium, Iron, Calcium, etc. Low iron or low vit D can make you feel run down and give you the achy symptoms as well.

Marilyn R Community Regular

Hi Luluo, and welcome to the forum! :)

I appreciate your post, because my neurologist wants me to have genetic testing even though I had negative blood tests and an upper endoscopy that came back negative. My neurologist wants me to have genetic testing. She already made me endure an EMG and also wants a nerve culture. After researching nerve culture, I declined. Now she wants genetic testing.

I told her that I don't have any children and couldn't see why it would be beneficial to have the genetic testing. She told me that it would help in diagnosing me. I've strongly encouraged all first degree relatives to get the celiac panel and genetic testing for their kids. So you answered a question for me...thank you.

I've had high ANA results strictly gluten free.

I'm not sure if this is the answer for you, but it was for me. Could there be another food intolerance? Sounds like you've been through the drill with the elimination diet, so you know what that means.

For me, soy, dairy, corn and legumes are out of my diet for now. If something else happens, I'll suspect nightshade vegetables. Those food families are fairly commonly problematic in this population from what I've read.

I went to an allergist and he pointed out a few other ones from skin prick testing. Not everyone believes in skin prick testing though.

Good luck, wish you well.

nora-n Rookie

If the doctor or the nurse said that you need both genes postive, this is utter nonsense!

THere is even one constellation where only one gene is possible, that is having the HLA DQ2,5 gene in trans! (made up of 05* in the alpha chain on one gene and the 02* in the beta chain on the other gene, like with DQ7,5 and DQ2,2)

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - knitty kitty replied to Sarah Grace's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      21

      Headaches / Migraines and Hypoglycaemia

    2. - Jmartes71 posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      0

      Related issues

    3. - trents replied to Sarah Grace's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      21

      Headaches / Migraines and Hypoglycaemia

    4. - Scott Adams replied to jessicafreya's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      Tamale ingredients

    5. - Wheatwacked replied to Roses8721's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      6

      GI DX celiac despite neg serology and no biopsy


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,145
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Kundrey
    Newest Member
    Kundrey
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Who's Online (See full list)

  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • knitty kitty
      @Sarah Grace,  Thank you for the update!  It's so good to hear from you!  I'm glad Thiamine, B Complex and magnesium have helped you.  Yes, it's important to take all three together.    I had to quit eating cheese and nuts a long time ago because they triggered migraines in me, too.  They are high in tyrosine, an amino acid, found also in fermented foods like sauerkraut and red wine.   I found taking Tryptophan very helpful with migraines.  Tryptophan is a precursor of serotonin and people with migraines are often low in serotonin.  (Don't take tryptophan if you're taking an SSRI.)     This recent study shows tryptophan really helps. The association between dietary tryptophan intake and migraine https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31254181/   For immediate respite from a migraine, try smiling REALLY BIG, mouth closed, tongue pressed against roof of mouth, and crinkle up your eyes like you just heard or saw the funniest thing...  This causes an endorphin release in the brain.  Usually it's the funny event, then the endorphin release and then the smile.  Smiling first makes the endorphin center think it missed something and it catches up quickly by releasing endorphins after the big crinkle eyed smile.  Must make crinkly eyes with smile or it won't work.  If you do this too frequently within a short time frame (several hours), you can deplete your endorphins, but you'll make more in a couple of hours, so no worries. Get your thyroid checked, too.  Migraines are also seen in low thyroid function (Hashimoto's or hypothyroidism).  Celiac and thyroid problems go hand in hand.   Vitamin D helps, too.  Low Vitamin D is found in migraine.   I'm so glad you're doing better.  
    • Jmartes71
      Its been a complete nightmare dealing with all these health issues one thing after another and being told many different things.I am looking for a new primary care physician considering when I told my past doctor of 25 years I was diagnosed before any foods eliminated from my diet and now this year at age 54 no longer able to push considering Im always exhausted, leg pain , stomach,skin and eye issues,high blood pressure to name a few all worsen because I was a  school bus driver and few years until my immune system went to hell and was fired because of it.Im still struggling now, Im sibo positive and been told im not celiac and that I am.I have a hernia and dealing with menopause. Its exhausting and is causing depression because of non medical help. Today I saw another gastrointestinalist and he said everything im feeling doesn't add up to celiac disease since my ITg levels are normal so celiac disease is under control and it's something else. I for got I had Barrett's esophagus diagnosed in 2007 because recent doctors down played it just like my celiac disease. Im currently looking for a pcp in my area because it is affecting me personally and professionally. Im told since celiac looks under control it's IBS and I need to see a therapist to control it. Gastrointestinalist around here think only food consumption and if ITG looks normal its bit celiac disease it's something else. Is this right? This is what im being told. I want medical help but told its IBS.Im feel lost by " medical team "
    • trents
      My migraines generally have their onset during the early morning hours as well. Presently, I am under siege with them, having headaches all but two days so far this month. I have looked at all the things reported to be common triggers (foods, sleep patterns, weather patterns, stress, etc.). Every time I think I start to see a pattern it proves not to pan out in the long run. I'm not sure it's any one thing but may, instead, be a combination of things that coalesce at certain times. It's very frustrating. The medication (sumatriptan or "Imatrix") is effective and is the only thing that will quell the pain. NSAIDs, Tylenol, even hydrocodone doesn't touch it. But they only give you 9 does of sumatriptan a month. And it doesn't help that medical science doesn't really know what causes migraines. They know some things about it but the root cause is still a mystery.
    • Scott Adams
      These are labeled gluten-free: https://www.amazon.com/Corn-Husks-Tamales-Authentic-Flavorful/dp/B01MDSHUTM/
    • Wheatwacked
      Just a gluten free diet is not enough.  Now you have to identify and replenish your malnutrition.  Celiac disease is co-morbid with malabsorption syndrome.  Low vitamin D, Low Thiamine caused Gastointeston Beriberi, low choline, low iodine are common the general population, and in newly diagnosed Celiacs in the western culture its is more likely.  It takes time to heal and you need to focus on vitamins and minerals.  Gluten free foods are not fortified like regular processed foods.  
×
×
  • 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.