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

Sensitive To Gluten And Milk, With Mostly Psychiatric Symptoms


gliadin-raider

Recommended Posts

gliadin-raider Newbie

Hello.

About 6 weeks ago, I decided to try a gluten and milk/casein free diet to see if it would benefit me. I have a pretty sad mix of symptoms, starting with problems with sleep since I was approximately 6 weeks old, ADHD-like symptoms for my whole life, and a chronic depression for seven years that among other things has left me extremely emotionally numb as well as with no appetite or thirst, and constantly sluggish and confused. I have responded poorly to terribly to every medication I have tried, almost 15 of them, so I am pretty motivated to try out other treatments. My stomach has never really been much of a problem for me, except when I am sick or under heavy stress, which is why I have never suspected a food allergy/intolerance or anything like it.

After 2 weeks without milk and with a reduced amount of gluten (I had accidently been eating some without knowing) I seemed to have improved a little bit, so I tried to eat gluten on purpouse again to see how I would react. In about 10 minutes I started to feel confused, spacy and weird, and it got gradually worse during the day until I was depressive and unstable during the evening. So ok, that kinda confirmed my intolerance to gluten for me. The next day I felt good again, so I decided to try the milk too. I had a glass and didn't seem to react to it, so I took another half an hour later. Still nothing. I seemed fine until 2 hours later around 4 PM when I felt a little tired. I went to bed to take a little nap...and woke up 4 hours later. I hadn't been tired before the test and hadn't slept worse than usual, and I have never slept that much spontaneously before, so that was a bit odd. The next days I felt worse and worse and I suspected I was reacting to the milk in a more delayed way. Took about a week to recover to where I was before the test...

I will get a stomach biopsy this week, and will get my antibodies tested again after that. I had them tested once before for celiac but that didn't show anything, but maybe something will show up now, who knows. I am clearly intolerant to gluten and milk anyway, regardless of what the tests say.

Does anyone else here have had problems such as these, with no stomach problems and no obvious reaction to food until after having excluded them for some time and then tested? How long did it take for you to experience significant improvements in your symptoms?

Also, I have had several stomach problem since I started the diet. I was constipated for 4 days shortly after starting the diet, and have had daily minor pains in my stomach. And without going into any messy details, I have also had some problems with my feces which have _always_ been fine before. In fact, this is kinda weird as my stomach has mostly been fine through my whole life. I don't understand why it would get worse now. Some kind of withdrawal reaction?

Thankful for any replies.

  • 2 weeks later...

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Kamma Explorer

Hi Gliadin raider...

I present mostly with neurological symptoms like ataxia, vertigo and balance problems.

I was going to ask if you are still consuming gluten? You said you were going to be tested soon and you need to be consuming gluten for quite a few weeks prior to that test or you might have skewed/negative results.

Welcome to the board!

pricklypear1971 Community Regular

Regarding your stomach issues:

You could be going through withdrawal. You could not be eating a balanced diet with enough fiber - its hard to change your eating habits quickly, but you'll get there. You could be uncovering other food issues now that you've eliminated two biggies - it happens all the time. It can just be a part of healing - most of us have wild rides the first 6 months.

Kamma is right - for the best test results you do need to continue to eat gluten. Since you've been tested before, and it was negative, you may not think its worthwhile to eat gluten again. Many people choose that option.

Probably more importantly, you need to get your vitamin levels checked. Iron (complete panel), d, b's, k. Celiacs and I think ncgi's are frequently low and it will help to raise them.

Best of luck to you. Congrats on figuring out your gluten and milk issues!

Skylark Collaborator

You are not alone. I had bipolar illness from gluten. I had all the GI trouble as well and it took me a while to heal. It sounds like you were going pretty fast! :)

As other folks have said it would be good stay on gluten for a bit longer to get celiac testing. It's possible to have "silent" celiac with no GI symptoms.

gliadin-raider Newbie

@Kamma

I am not consuming milk or gluten anymore. The testing I did was an endoscopy plus a biopsy, and I thought any damage as revealed by these tests would be too extensive to heal in just a few weeks to heal, unless I am mistaken? I have not tested for antibodies or anything like that yet. They didn't see anything on the endoscopy, but results on the biopsy will be back in 2 weeks (not sure what exactly they are testing it for though).

And thanks for the welcome.=)

@pricklypear1971

Whatever I have experienced the last weeks seems some kind of withdrawal. Most of the new issues seem to have calmed down by now though, but I still don't feel as good as I did for the first week.

6 months, gee... I have been mostly clean for about 1 month now, almost clean for 1 and a half. Seems like I still have some way to go then...

I don't think fiber was the issue really, I started to consume soy and pure oats (guaranteed gluten free by Sweden's food agency) early in the diet switch, so if anything I think I am getting more

fibers now than I did before. Anyway, whatever made my stomach upset, it seems gone now.

I have tested my vitamin and mineral levels several times before without anything low showing up, including several D vitamin tests.

What is a "complete panel" though? Does it differ from a normal test (which I suppose is what I did)?

@Skylark

Yeah, whatever I have seems to be "silent" in regards of GI symptoms. Stomach/GI has never been much of a problem for me, until I began the diet... The issues I had are gone to 90% now, with only some minor pains once or twice a day at most, no pains at all at best. How long did it take for you to improve in your bipolar-ish symptoms?

Considering how I now seem to react even stronger than before to gluten and milk/casein, I am not that eager to eat it again for any longer period. Perhaps a week at most of one or the other.. Is it that important to eat it for a prolonged period for the antibody tests (assuming the endoscopy/biopsy doesn't require this too, see above)? I will discuss this with my doctor and a specialist in this if we can find one, but I hope I won't need to eat either again for several weeks to get positive tests... I believe a diagnosis doesn't strictly require a positive test because they are not yet 100% as of today (for non-celiac sensitivity, anyway) -- does anyone have an idea? From what I have read a response to food challenge would be enough, even if no antibodies are found.

pricklypear1971 Community Regular

All you need to eat for a Celiac panel is gluten. You could leave the milk out.

Different Celiac tests measure different things, but the iga antibodies drop quickly. More than two weeks without gluten, IMO, is too long without gluten for accurate testing.

You can still be NCGI without a positive endoscopy or blood work. The only way to accurately dx it currently is with a gluten-free trial.

And soy is a big problem for some people. Most say their symptoms from soy are as bad or worse than from gluten. Many of them neurological. If you don't feel improvement i'd experiment with dropping it.

And a complete panel for iron is one that measures iron stores, circulating levels, etc. Many doctors just order ferritin.

gliadin-raider Newbie

Ah, yes, probably wouldn't have to eat both at a time.

How long would I have to eat gluten again for antibody levels to rise?

I think Iga was what we tested a year ago with negative result though.

I have considered dropping soy too, but I don't seem to have a problem with it. At least it doesn't seem to be interfering with the improvements I get

from my current diet. I may consider dropping it once the improvement from gluten and milk subsides, but those seem to have been the major ones for me.

Ok, I think I have just done a ferritin test then. Will consider a more extensive test after discussing with my doctor, thanks.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



pricklypear1971 Community Regular

They say to eat gluten for 3 months prior to testing. There's no good information about how long to add it back if you just dropped it. Sorry.

Were you iga deficient when they tested? Were your levels below normal? That could be one reason your tests are negative. Also, I think many tests are dependent on iga - so it wouldn't just invalidate one test. You'll want to research the tests and see.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,127
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Steve715
    Newest Member
    Steve715
    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

    • knitty kitty
      Just wanted to add that checking B12 and Vitamin D only is not going to give an accurate picture of vitamin deficiencies.   B12 Cobalamine needs the seven other B vitamins to work properly.   You can have vitamin deficiency symptoms before the B12 blood level changes to show deficiency.  You can have "normal" B12, but have deficiencies in other B vitamins like Thiamine and Niacin, for which there are no accurate tests. Take a B Complex supplement with all the B vitamins.  Take additional Thiamine B 1 in the form Benfotiamine which has been shown to promote intestinal healing.  Thiamine Mononitrate found in most vitamin supplements is not easy for the body to utilize.  What makes thiamine mononitrate not break down on the shelf also makes it hard for the body to absorb and utilize.  Thiamine and Niacin B 3 deficiency symptoms include anxiety, depression and irritability.  The brain uses more Thiamine than other organs.  Take the B Complex and Thiamine in the form Benfotiamine or TTFD (tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide) and look for health improvements in the following weeks.
    • knitty kitty
      Hello, @rei.b, Ehlers Danlos syndrome and Celiac Disease can occur together in genetically predisposed individuals.  Losing ones gallbladder is common with celiac disease. I'm glad Naltrexone is helping with your pain.  Naltrexone is known to suppress tTg IgA and tTg IgG production, so it's not surprising that only your DGP IgG and DGP IgA are high.   Have you tried the Autoimmune Protocol diet designed by Dr. Sarah Ballantyne, a Celiac herself?  The AIP diet helps lower inflammation and promotes intestinal healing.   The AIP diet is a Paleo diet that eliminates foods that can cause intestinal inflammation until you heal on the inside, then more foods can be added back in.  The low histamine AIP diet will help reduce inflammation further.   Histamine is released as part of the immune response in celiac disease.  Foods also contain various amounts of histamine or provoke histamine release.  Lowering the amount of histamine from foods helps.  The body, with help from B vitamins, can clear histamine, but if more histamine is consumed than can be cleared, you can stay in an inflammatory state for a long time. Cutting out high histamine foods is beneficial.  Omit night shades which contain alkaloids that add to leaky gut syndrome found with celiac disease.  Night shades include tomatoes, peppers including bell peppers, potatoes and eggplants.  Processed foods like sausages and gluten-free processed products are high in histamines.  All Grains are removed from the diet because they are inflammatory and provoke histamine release. Blood tests for deficiencies in B vitamins are notoriously inaccurate.  You can have vitamin deficiency symptoms before blood levels show a deficiency.  Blood levels do not accurately measure the quantity of B vitamins stored inside the cells where they are utilized.  The brain will order stored vitamins to be released from organs into the blood stream to keep the brain and heart supplied while deficiency occurs inside organs, like the gallbladder.  Gall bladder dysfunction is caused by a deficiency in Thiamine Vitamin B 1 and other B vitamins.   The eight essential B vitamins are water soluble and easily lost with diarrhea and constipation, and the malabsorption and inflammation that occurs with celiac disease.  Because they are water soluble, the body can easily excrete any excess B vitamins in urine.  The best way to see if you are deficient is to take a B Complex and Thiamine in the form Benfotiamine and look for health improvements in the following weeks.  Most B Complex supplements contain Thiamine Mononitrate which is not bioavailable.  The body has a difficult time utilizing thiamine mononitrate because it doesn't break down easily.  Benfotiamine has been shown to promote intestinal healing.   Remember your intestines are in a damaged, permeable state.  Treat them tenderly, like you would a baby until they heal.  You wouldn't feed a baby spicy bell peppers and hard to digest corn and nuts.  Change your diet so your intestines can heal.   I use a combination of B12 Cobalamine, B 6 Pyridoxine, and B1 Benfotiamine for pain.  These three B vitamins have analgesic properties.  They relieve pain better than other otc pain relievers. 
    • Mari
    • trents
      Sorry, I think I got you mixed up with another poster.
    • rei.b
      I hadn't been eating gluten free before having the antibody test done. I started eating gluten free after having the test done because the gastro PA told me to eat gluten-free for 6 months. I'm now 3 months in.
×
×
  • 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.