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

The Obligatory "is This Dh?" Post.


saintmaybe

Recommended Posts

saintmaybe Collaborator

Hey guys- I've had what's always been diagnosed as acne

on my back and shoulderrs spreading all the way down to my butt since I was like, 10 years old. It's been unremitting, although it's less bad than it used to be. The skin of the affected area is also constantly red and pretty itchy. I always say the fastest way to my heart is via a good back scratch!

Here's a few pictures for reference. The bumps are red, and can definitely be painful, but they're not superating like acne is, if that makes sense. I'm curious as to whether this IS dermatitis herpetiformis. I'm kind of tired of going to the doctor's office and getting the hairy eyeball, like I have poor hygiene.

photo.webp

And one with a little more contrast lighting.

photo2.webp


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Hopeful1950 Explorer

It's hard to tell because DH can present very differently on different people and depending where on the body it is.

I can only tell you how mine behaves...I feel a sensation of kind of prickly and itchy, then small itchy red bumps appear. If I have managed not to scratch them they will have little fluid filled blisters on them. Most of the time I can't see the blisters with the naked eye. I need a magnifying glass. When you get a new patch do you have someone who could take a look with magnification? The blisters are very fragile and break easily, even from clothing rubbing, so it might take a few tries.

Here is a link to some of the best pix of DH I have ever seen: Open Original Shared Link

The "hairy eyeball"...I cracked up :lol: . I've been getting that for 8 years. It's hard to get a correct diagnosis if you have DH, and I'm beginning to think it is not only DH, it is any "non-specific" rash.

lovegrov Collaborator

Doesn't look anything like my DH did and it's not in a common spot for DH.

Richard

saintmaybe Collaborator

Doesn't look anything like my DH did and it's not in a common spot for DH.

Richard

Really? Because from the above posters link, it looks like there are at least three different general clinical presentations of Dh- blistering, more of an acne type, and some really localized dark red spots over a large surface area. It also looks like it can vary from severe (holy schneickes, was I bit by a BROWN RECLUSE!?) to irritating annoying itchy red bumps. It also looks like it can appear anywhere on the body, including upper back and shoulders- there are at least three pictures of women who have very similar Dh in the exact same place I do. The pictures actually look almost identical.

Common areas appear to be the buttocks (ouch, I have to say), the groin, the upper back and shoulders and the stomach.

Dark red, large surface area:

dermatitis-herpetiformis-3.webp

I've been bit by a spider! (Not really, but it looks just as painful)

dermatitis-herpetiformis-35.webp

Chronic Bacne Presentation (Looks pretty darn similar to mine).

dermatitis-herpetiformis-1.webp

More Bacne

dermatitis-herpetiformis-55.webp

Symmetrical presentation of blistering, red type (what I'd consider probably the most common presentation based on the pictures)

dermatitis-herpetiformis-80.webp

Point being, if my rash doesn't look like yours and isn't in the same place as yours...that proves what exactly?

Anecdotal evidence only gets us so far with Dh, generally speaking, because look, five different presentations on five different people! No wonder the doctors are confused.

saintmaybe Collaborator

It's hard to tell because DH can present very differently on different people and depending where on the body it is.

I can only tell you how mine behaves...I feel a sensation of kind of prickly and itchy, then small itchy red bumps appear. If I have managed not to scratch them they will have little fluid filled blisters on them. Most of the time I can't see the blisters with the naked eye. I need a magnifying glass. When you get a new patch do you have someone who could take a look with magnification? The blisters are very fragile and break easily, even from clothing rubbing, so it might take a few tries.

Here is a link to some of the best pix of DH I have ever seen: Open Original Shared Link

The "hairy eyeball"...I cracked up :lol: . I've been getting that for 8 years. It's hard to get a correct diagnosis if you have DH, and I'm beginning to think it is not only DH, it is any "non-specific" rash.

You have to laugh, and have a sense of humor about this- otherwise you're just gonna cry. Our bodies get beat up over years of celiac abuse!

Thanks for the link! I'd seen a few of those pictures before, but never so many in one place. Enormously helpful. It must be difficult to diagnose Dh because I presume doctors are taught that rash X looks like Y, not rash A can look like B, C, OR D, except when it rains,and then it might look like I, and don't forget to ask about the patients age, because then it can be P or Q....

squirmingitch Veteran

:lol: Saintmaybe; humor will make a survivor out of you. I know it's my #1 life survival tool.

Honestly, I get ones on my back that look like that & on that portion of my back too. I also get ones in many other places which present themselves quite differently. I think my body has seen any/all forms of dh on any given portion of my body at one time or another through this process. The one I'm most concerned with is.... GETTING THEM ALL TO GO AWAY!!! PERMANENTLY!

cahill Collaborator

Your pictures looks very similar to my diagnosed DH and is in the same areas as mine.

When I was 17 I did have it on my arms ( the week before my wedding :blink: )

Now (at 54) and for the past few years it is mainly on my shoulders ,back and bottom.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



lovegrov Collaborator

Uhh, saintmaybe, you seemed to have been asking us if in our experience this looked like DH. I make no pretense that I can diagnose you in a photo, but like it or not, this looks absolutely nothing AT ALL like the DH I had for 20 years. Not even close. Mine looked like the guy showing us his elbow, although not quite that severe.

richard

saintmaybe Collaborator

Lovegrov- rich, not trying to be rude, just asking an honest question. Because while it's not similar to yours, others have chimed in and said it DOES look like theirs. It's confusing! I think I've answered my own question, in that dh can probably only be definitively diagnosed via biopsy.

Di2011 Enthusiast

I'm not diagnosed but gluten free works for me. I have to be extremely careful with gluten and salts/iodine. Eggs (yolk) are on my don't eat list now. I'm not game enough to even try seafood - my absolute favourite food. That will have to wait.

My DH went wild on my last day working at a bakery. I have it from head to ankle. :ph34r:

It looks like every DH picture I've seen, including the ones you have posted here(except one). And I've seen a LOT of skin pictures. I've been really careful to discriminate - legitimate medical (ie diagnosed) - and seen way too many pictures of other skin problems I'm glad I don't have. :P

The only pictures that don't resemble my DH are the ones like the one you tagged with "I've been bit by a spider! (Not really, but it looks just as painful)" It is way way way too painful and itchy to let it get so fluid filled. I describe it like toxin/acid/poison trying to get out of my skin and I have to help it out.

The different areas of my body appear slightly differently.

My hands/wrists are the most likely place to have the typical linear herpes looking ones. The few I get on my palms seem to be least itchiest. I know when I've been glutened because I get little bubbly ones on my fingers within the hour. These rarely appear when I've overdone the iodine.

The big (up to about a 75mm) and really nasty burning itch ones appear on my upper arm, upper thigh and buttocks. These are the ones that have (((thankfully!!!!!!!!)) had a very good reaction to gluten free.

My torso (belly, breast) tends to be much smaller bumps which are sometimes a bit like having blackheads.

My back is just like yours.

I can't wait to shave my underarms and legs :lol: Healing so shouldn't be too long now!!!

saintmaybe Collaborator

Well guys, I can't stand the suspense. I also live less than an hour from Beth Israel, which has a major celiac research center and an appointed dermatologist (a Harvard professor no less) who can evaluate my Dh. I'm damned lucky to be able to take advantage of resources that other cellars can't, either financially or geographically. Making my appointment in the A.M.

pricklypear1971 Community Regular

Well guys, I can't stand the suspense. I also live less than an hour from Beth Israel, which has a major celiac research center and an appointed dermatologist (a Harvard professor no less) who can evaluate my Dh. I'm damned lucky to be able to take advantage of resources that other cellars can't, either financially or geographically. Making my appointment in the A.M.

Have fun.

Yeah...if it acts like DH it probably is. That's the only consistency I've found in the zillions of posts compared to the scanty and repetitive info I've found.

squirmingitch Veteran

Well guys, I can't stand the suspense. I also live less than an hour from Beth Israel, which has a major celiac research center and an appointed dermatologist (a Harvard professor no less) who can evaluate my Dh. I'm damned lucky to be able to take advantage of resources that other cellars can't, either financially or geographically. Making my appointment in the A.M.

Good for you. Go, get it done with & then you can stop wondering & get on with whatever it is you need to do.

Let us know what turns up.

Di2011 Enthusiast

Be sure to let us know how you go with the Professor!!!

saintmaybe Collaborator

Hey guys- Made an appointment this morning with the professor. She's booked out until February unfortunately, but I guess if you want the best, you have to wait for the best. I figure this gives me time to finish my genetic testing, really update my food journal, and take some more time lapse pictures that might help make a diagnosis.

saintmaybe Collaborator

UPDATE PART 2: I found a chiropractor that specializes in celiac disease that's not five miles away from my house and where I work. I am spoiled for riches lately. I'm making an appointment tomorrow to get this damn back realigned and get this sciatic pain evaluated, because, this hurts like a you know what. They also say specifically that they specialize in holistic and wellness evaluation. I'm sick to death of traditional doctors and pills. Give me a chiro or an acupuncturist any day. Cause you know what? They've always been the most helpful, even pre-diagnosis.

lovegrov Collaborator

Good idea. Apparently mine was incredibly obvious because my dermatologist, who is no celiac expert, took one look and knew what it was. I never even had a skin biopsy. Unfortunately, he didn't know at the time about the celiac connection to DH.

richard

  • 3 weeks later...
tlcounts Newbie

Wanted to say that my spots look EXACTLY like yours! Thank you! I've so far tested negative to the celiac blood panel test and a dermatologist did biopsy a blistery spot which came back negative but from what I've been reading here he did it wrong. He only took a slice off a spot, no punch and no unaffected skin.

Please do keep us posted as to what your doctors says. I'm off to find a new dermatologist.

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. - Samanthaeileen1 replied to Samanthaeileen1's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      7

      Thoughts? Non-endoscopic Celiac diagnosis in two year old

    2. - GlorietaKaro replied to GlorietaKaro's topic in Super Sensitive People
      5

      Am I nuts?

    3. - trents replied to GlorietaKaro's topic in Super Sensitive People
      5

      Am I nuts?

    4. - GlorietaKaro replied to GlorietaKaro's topic in Super Sensitive People
      5

      Am I nuts?

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

    • Total Members
      132,807
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Aron2
    Newest Member
    Aron2
    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

    • JoJo0611
      Thank you this really helped. 
    • Samanthaeileen1
      Okay that is really good to know. So with that being positive and the other being high it makes sense she diagnosed her even without the endoscopy. So glad we caught it early. She had so many symptoms though that to me it was clear something was wrong.   yeah I think we had better test us and the other kids as well. 
    • GlorietaKaro
      One doctor suggested it, but then seemed irritated when I asked follow-up questions. Oh well—
    • trents
      @GlorietaKaro, your respiratory reactions to gluten make me wonder if there might also be an allergic (anaphylaxis) component at work here.
    • GlorietaKaro
      Thanks to both of you for your responses!  Sadly, even after several years of very strict gluten avoidance, I remember the symptoms well enough that I am too frightened to risk a gluten challenge— heartbeat and breathing problems are scary— Scott, thank you for the specific information— I will call around in the new year to see if I can find anyone. In the meantime, I will carry on has I have been— it’s working! Thanks also for the validation— sometimes I just feel crushed by disbelief. Not enough to make me eat gluten though—
×
×
  • 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.