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How Much Gluten To Eat Before Blood Test?


Mary07

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Mary07 Newbie

I went to the doctor a few weeks ago because I was getting very sick. She asked me questions and said to try a gluten free diet for 2 weeks. I did and felt amazing. I never knew how normal felt until I stopped eating gluten. I must have been having stomach aches my whole life. Anyways I called her after the 2 weeks and asked her what to do now. She said to get a test called gluten sensitivity evaluation blood test and to get an accurate test I need to eat the equivalence of 4-6 pieces of bread a day for 4 weeks. Is this true? I was only off of it for 2 weeks! and what does that even mean? Just eat 4 pieces of bread a day? Any suggestions?


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domesticactivist Collaborator

Yes you must be eating lots of gluten. The number I get from 4 slices of average bread is nearly 20 grams of gluten a day. Usually the advice is for three months. Only two weeks off it, though, the one month may be ok. I hate how many drs have people go gluten free before deciding to test. It's standard but puts people through so much pain and a longer wait to less accurate test results. Grrrr.

domesticactivist Collaborator

Find out how much gluten is in your bread, pasta, cream of wheat, etc by looking at the protein content per serving on te label.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

Just eat a regular diet. Most folks on a normal diet eat at least the 4 slice of bread worth of gluten in a day and then some. Have a gluten cereal for breakfast, a sandwich or sub or a soup with noodles or barley for lunch and something with gluten for dinner and snacks. I wouldn't worry about 'adding up the protein count' since many foods have more than one protein source in them and that would be a real pain IMHO.

If you start to feel very ill from the challenge do contact your doctor. Reacting badly to a challenge after we have been gluten-free for even a short time is a valid part of the diagnostic process and some of us will react very violently to the challenge even if we have only been off gluten a short time.

Keep in mind that false negatives on testing is not uncommon even on a full gluten diet. After your testing is done, including endo if you are having one go back to the diet if it helps even if the tests should be negative.

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