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

Newly Diagnosed And Depressed About It All


aroche84

Recommended Posts

aroche84 Rookie

For the last several years I have delt with stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, and increased fatigue. I spent most of the time being told I was "fine", "stressed", or "trying to do to much without rest" by doctors. Recently I received a call on a Saturday from my doctor who re-evaluated my upper endoscopy and colonoscopy (spelling) results. When he did he noticed that part of my small intestine had errosions in it and that I was displaying all symptoms of Celiac Disease. He told me that he felt confident enough to say that he was 99% sure that I did have celiac disease but that a blood test would need to be done in order to 100% diagnose the celiac disease.

Immediately I looked up Celiac and found that I had all the symptoms minus seizures that were associate with celiac disease, including a itchy rash composed of small bumps all over my arms, legs, back, and stomach. My doctor initially thought that these were grass mite bites prescribed a steroid and prescription strength benedryl and sent me on my way. I have become overwelmed with what I can eat/can't eat, why am I so fatigued, pain in my stomach, the pain of the bumps, and the depression of what did I do to cause this. I have always considered myself a semi healthy eater. Other than brussell sprouts there is not a vegetable I don't eat, likewise with fruit. I prefered a salad over a cheeseburger and while I could probably exercise a little more I was never unactive by any means.

I guess what I am wanting to know is does this get easier? Will there be a time when I go to the grocery store and I am not constantly looking up every food on my phone and crying because it seems like nothing I used to buy is gluten free. I have eaten quite a bit of cottage cheese and fruit because I know that those items are safe. It just seems so overwhelming and I don't know what to do. Any help or words of wisdom would be greatly appreciated!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



eatmeat4good Enthusiast

Thank God your Dr. finally figured it out! And now you will get better!

Think fresh meat, chicken, fish, vegetables, nuts, seeds, and forget the packaged goods for best results. I did use dairy in the beginning and ignored the advice not to eat dairy. Later I regretted that decision...several months later I realized dairy was not OK for me. Most newly diagnosed cannot tolerate dairy because the tips of the villi produce the enzyme for digesting dairy and they have been eroded by Celiac often. You may be ok for a while with it...but later you may start reacting. For now...choose one salty treat and one sweet treat...gluten free of course...and otherwise stay only in the meat and produce sections...

Reading labels becomes a lifestyle.

Healing takes time.

Fresh meat and vegetables and fruit are best.

Packaged goods are not only expensive but they offer very little nutrition.

Having said that...I couldn't have lived without Snickers and Cheetos in the beginning. This was my salty and my sweet snack. The rest of the time I cooked whole foods.

So happy you found out! And I hope you heal really fast!

Oh, and Udi's bread is the only one I will eat...and only occasionally.

Take a deep breath! Lot's of recipes and helpful people here. Welcome to feeling better.

Marilyn R Community Regular

Hi Ashley, and welcome to the forum!

Yes, omg the diet gets easier! Shopping gets easier.

Do use the seaarch engine on the forum (upper left) to learn about cross contamination (cc) if you haven't already.

As for grocery shopping, it will be difficult at first, but then you learn to go to just the aisles that have the stuff you need (whole foods, like meat and fish and vegetables).

Kettle brand salt and pepper potato chips are great if you feel like cruising down the snack section. If you can tolerate corn, most corn chips are gluten-free (including Fritos, last time I checked, but that's been awhile.)

Try to focus on what you can have vs. what you can't, and that you have a disease but it's a disease you can control with what you eat, which is pretty cool, vs. what most people have to contend with who have autoimmune diseases.

It takes awhile to feel better, but I think you'll be happy in the long run that it is "only" celiac disease.

When you're ready, it also pays to check out health and beauty products.

Good luck!

challengeaccepted Newbie

Hi Ashley, and welcome to the forum!

Yes, omg the diet gets easier! Shopping gets easier.

Do use the seaarch engine on the forum (upper left) to learn about cross contamination (cc) if you haven't already.

As for grocery shopping, it will be difficult at first, but then you learn to go to just the aisles that have the stuff you need (whole foods, like meat and fish and vegetables).

Kettle brand salt and pepper potato chips are great if you feel like cruising down the snack section. If you can tolerate corn, most corn chips are gluten-free (including Fritos, last time I checked, but that's been awhile.)

Try to focus on what you can have vs. what you can't, and that you have a disease but it's a disease you can control with what you eat, which is pretty cool, vs. what most people have to contend with who have autoimmune diseases.

It takes awhile to feel better, but I think you'll be happy in the long run that it is "only" celiac disease.

When you're ready, it also pays to check out health and beauty products.

Good luck!

I agree. I was diagnosed 1yr, 2 months ago. I had a huge pity party for myself, but then realized that being handed the answer to a lifetime of pain and discomfort, was something to celebrate.

Instead of getting down on what you think you can't eat, get excited at what you can! Still all the fresh veggies and fruits, tasty unprocessed meats, eggs. You will get to discover new grains! Like Quinoa. You can still eat rice, potato, rice noodles/wraps. Anything fresh and wholesome is now your ticket for relief and fullness.

Try a tasty stirfry, with fresh garlic, ginger and some hot chile's. You don't need a sauce, and when you aren't feeling so overwhelmed, then go do some more grocery sleuthing.

Baby steps. Like grilled broccoli, with olive oil and sea salt as a side dish for a beautiful bbq'd steak and mashed potato's.

You can do this, focus on the small things, the staples, and everything else will come in time.

Also, depending on where you live, some natural food stores offer tours(free) and will highlight sections in the stores that will have what you need. Nature's Emporium is huge for that up here in Canada. Gluten free signs clearly marked in every aisle.

Keep it whole and fresh!

Good luck and know you are not alone. All of us were where you are right now.

Bubba's Mom Enthusiast

Congratulations on getting a diagnosis! Now you have some answers, and on a strict gluten free diet your health will improve.

I'm newly diagnosed too, and the grocery store really brings on feelings of overwhelm and great sadness. I'm sure with time we'll know what to get and can breeze through?

Stay to the outer parameter(other than the bakery) for healthy fruits and veggies, meats, and dairy(once you're allowed to have it).

Do take vitamin suppliments, fish oil, D3 that are gluten free.

I have been reading everything I can find on the topic, and if you have damage to the intestine, raw veggies are harder to digest at first. Eat them cooked or steamed until you heal. Dairy is diogested from an enzyme in the small intestine, so if you have damage you won't digest it. Hold off on it for now.

Try to focus on what you CAN have, rather than what you can't.

T.H. Community Regular

So sorry it's been so hard! *hugs*

And yeah, it's hard in the beginning, because there is so much information that you don't know and it's something that you HAVE to deal with every day now. But really, it's like anything else new: starting a new job, having a baby, moving to a new city. You'll be bombarded with new information constantly, and it'll feel like you'll never figure it out. And then you'll remember some things, and then more, and figure out even more, and eventually, you'll have it all down pat, knowing what you can eat and can't, knowing what brands are good and what aren't, skimming through labels like it's nothing. It really does get easier, but ...yeah, it sucks for the first couple of weeks to months, usually.

BUT...there's one thing you get right now that you wouldn't get with everything else new: you'll be feeling BETTER at the same time. It is amazing how much easier all this new stuff is when suddenly, you're not nauseated and miserable and exhausted all the time.

I found out I had lots of other foods I couldn't eat, too (dairy, soy, potatoes, eggs...sugarcane and coffee. :huh: ) I dropped SO much food from my diet. If you'd told me it was going to happen ahead of time, I would have been crying like a baby. And instead, when I was eating crappier food (still trying to figure out how to cook without all those other ingredients at the time), and had less choices, and SHOULD have been depressed as all heck. That was the time I was feeling energized and upbeat and so awake and aware of the world for the first time in YEARS that even with all the foods I was missing, I was still feeling SO much better.

It's weird, but it works out like that for a lot of us. Hard to feel too bad about the diet when you start feeling so much BETTER. But you have to GET to that better part before it really hits.

I would second the idea of looking up how to avoid gluten cross contamination. I know of one gal recently who went gluten free but wasn't avoiding cross contamination, and she still couldn't get better until she did. Might as well start off strong, even if it's hard, and get better faster, yeah? :-)

Good luck! Hope that your recovery is smooth and fast!

Marilyn R Community Regular

One other thing I wanted to add is that what you're going through is perfectly normal. I started crying the first couple of times I went to the grocery store. And probably the first times I went shopping, I left with less than 10 items because I felt so overwhelmed from reading labels and worrying.


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.

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

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - tiffanygosci posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      0

      New Celiac Mama in My 30s

    2. - knitty kitty replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      8

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,

    3. - Yaya replied to Jhona's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      29

      Does anyone here also have Afib

    4. - larc replied to Jhona's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      29

      Does anyone here also have Afib

    5. - klmgarland replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      8

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,921
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Serena Rodriguez
    Newest Member
    Serena Rodriguez
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • tiffanygosci
      Hello all! My life in the last five years has been crazy. I got married in 2020 at the age of 27, pregnant with our first child almost two months later, gave birth in 2021. We had another baby in April of 2023 and our last baby this March of 2025. I had some issues after my second but nothing ever made me think, "I should see a doctor about this." After having my last baby this year, my body has finally started to find its new rhythm and balance...but things started to feel out of sorts. A lot of symptoms were convoluted with postpartum symptoms, and, to top it all off, my cycle came back about 4m postpartum. I was having reoccurring migraines, nausea, joint pain, numbness in my right arm, hand and fingers, tummy problems, hives. I finally went to my PCP in August just for a wellness check and I brought up my ailments. I'm so thankful for a doctor that listens and is thorough. He ended up running a food allergy panel, an environmental respiratory panel, and a celiac panel. I found out I was allergic to wheat, allergic to about every plant and dust mites, and I did have celiac. I had an endoscopy done on October 3 and my results confirmed celiac in the early stages! I am truly blessed to have an answer to my issues. When I eat gluten, my brain feels like it's on fire and like someone is squeezing it. I can't think straight and I zone out easily. My eyes can't focus. I get a super bad migraine and nausea. I get so tired and irritable and anxious. My body hurts sometimes and my gut gets bloated, gassy, constipated, and ends with bowel movements. All this time I thought I was just having mom brain or feeling the effects of postpartum, sleep deprivation, and the like (which I probably was having and the celiac disease just ramped it up!) I have yet to see a dietician but I've already been eating and shopping gluten-free. My husband and I have been working on turning our kitchen 100% gluten-free (we didn't think this would be so expensive but he assured me that my health is worth all the money in the world). There are still a few things to replace and clean. I'm already getting tired of reading labels. I even replaced some of my personal hygiene care for myself and the kids because they were either made with oats or not labeled gluten-free. I have already started feeling better but have made some mistakes along the way or have gotten contamination thrown into the mix. It's been hard! Today I joked that I got diagnosed at the worst time of the year with all the holidays coming up. I will just need to bring my own food to have and to share. It will be okay but different after years of eating "normally". Today I ordered in person at Chipotle and was trying not to feel self-conscious as the line got long because they were following food-allergy protocols. It's all worth it to be the healthiest version of myself for me and my family. I would be lying if I said I wasn't a little overwhelmed and a little overloaded!  I am thankful for this community and I look forward to learning more from you all. I need the help, that's for sure!
    • knitty kitty
      On the AIP diet, all processed foods are eliminated.  This includes gluten-free bread.  You'll be eating meats and vegetables, mostly.  Meats that are processed, like sausages, sandwich meats, bacons, chicken nuggets, etc., are eliminated as well.  Veggies should be fresh, or frozen without other ingredients like sauces or seasonings.  Nightshade vegetables (eggplant, potatoes, tomatoes, peppers) are excluded.  They contain alkaloids that promote a leaky gut and inflammation.  Dairy and eggs are also eliminated.   I know it sounds really stark, but eating this way really improved my health.  The AIP diet can be low in nutrients, and, with malabsorption, it's important to supplement vitamins and minerals.  
    • Yaya
      Thank you for responding and for prayers.  So sorry for your struggles, I will keep you in mine.  You are so young to have so many struggles, mine are mild by comparison.  I didn't have Celiac Disease (celiac disease) until I had my gallbladder removed 13 years ago; at least nothing I was aware of.  Following surgery: multiple symptoms/oddities appeared including ridges on fingernails, eczema, hair falling out in patches, dry eyes, upset stomach constantly and other weird symptoms that I don't really remember.  Gastro did tests and endoscopy and verified celiac disease. Re heart: I was born with Mitral Valve Prolapse (MVP) and an irregular heartbeat, yet heart was extremely strong.  It was difficult to pick up the irregular heartbeat on the EKG per cardiologist.  I had Covid at 77, recovered in 10 days and 2 weeks later developed long Covid. What the doctors and nurses called the "kickoff to long Covid, was A-fib.  I didn't know what was going on with my heart and had ignored early symptoms as some kind of passing aftereffect stemming from Covid.  I was right about where it came from, but wrong on it being "passing".  I have A-fib as my permanent reminder of Covid and take Flecainide every morning and night and will for the rest of my life to stabilize my heartbeat.   
    • larc
      When I accidentally consume gluten it compromises the well-being of my heart and arteries. Last time I had a significant exposure, about six months ago, I had AFib for about ten days. It came on every day around dinner time. After the ten days or so it went away and hasn't come back.  My cardiologist offered me a collection of pharmaceuticals at the time.  But I passed on them. 
    • klmgarland
      So I should not eat my gluten free bread?  I will try the vitamins.  Thank you all so very much for your ideas and understanding.  I'm feeling better today and have gathered back my composure! Thank you kitty kitty   I am going to look this diet up right away.  And read the paleo diet and really see if I can make this a better situation then it currently is.  
×
×
  • 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.