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

Rash Disappeared When Diet Tweaked


dws

Recommended Posts

dws Contributor

I have recently had to go to a whole foods/non-processed diet due to my increased gluten sensitivity. I am one of those people who doctors do not think has celiac disease. The only blood work that I scored above normal was an IGG blood test(a pretty high positive). Negative on IGA's including TTG. Negative on genetic testing. No biopsy done while eating gluten because my doctor was sure my blood work pointed to non-celiac gluten intolerance rather than celiac. I accepted this diagnosis and was very happy with the disappearance of my intestinal symptoms when I stopped eating gluten. After abour 2 years, I began to struggle again and have been kind of on the run trying to stay ahead of the sensitivity curve, leading me after a lot of trial and error to a whole food diet which has helped a lot. I can't remember when I started having an angry, itchy, and sometimes painful red rash on either side of my nose where my nose meets my cheeks. I think it may have been about 15 years ago. Long before I eliminated gluten which was about 5 years ago. My doctor decided it was not Rosacea and gave me a strong antifungal cream which kept it somewhat at bay if I used it every day but never got rid of it. Well, with this final tweaking of my diet, the rash has gone away. Now I have gone back to wondering if I have Celiac after all and that they just don't know enough about it to exclude it with the current testing standards. I also have always had discolored tooth enamel with white bands. Lactose intolerance has also become a problem in the last couple of years. I know the location of the rash isn't typical for DH, but what do you folks think? Anybody had a similar rash?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



eatmeat4good Enthusiast

I too, had rashes that did not occur in the typical places for Celiac DH. I was on anti-fungals, aniti-virals, anti-bacterials, and finally they said it was neurotic excoriation. It went away but only after 14 months totally gluten free. I went Paleo and it all went away...including depression and anxiety, migraines and muscle weakness. I say if the rash goes away when you get off of wheat and gluten...then it probably is DH...

They certainly do not know enough about it to be diagnosing it consistently with any accuracy. Your research is as good as it gets. I would assume DH and live accordingly. Congratulations on healing yourself!

This is just my humble opinion after 7 miserable years with this rash moving around my body and landing on my face. Mine is on the forehead and chin...or should I say WAS!!! Because I too, healed myself. Turns out I am extremely sensitive to gluten...as you are....and I do way better on whole foods, no preservatives and no grains.

Took a long time...but the rash is gone...never could get a dermatologist to agree to biopsy...so we will never know....except that...we already know!!!! Thank you for sharing your story because other's will read it and heal from it too.

itchy Rookie

You are right about the testing. Most of the active posters here have had the experience of not being diagnosed by the tests used.

When your doctor says you may have 'non=coeliac gluten intolerance", he is probably refusing to acknowledge that his tests don't detect your illness. From your general symptoms you certainly sound coeliac to me, which means that you have to eat gluten free for the rest of your life. If indeed you are coeliac and have DH, I think that you can expect to see the rash return (perhaps with a vengeance) whenever you return to a gluten diet.

Perhaps not a typical location for a DH rash, but otherwise sounds like it. Most coeliacs are intolerant of milk, I'm not sure it is lactose intolerance, because Lactaid never made any difference for me. I am still intolerant of raw milk products but don't have a problem with cultured milk products like cheese or yougurt. Generally milk intolerance improves with a gluten free diet.

dilettantesteph Collaborator

There are many skin conditions linked with celiac disease. Open Original Shared Link

It could be something besides DH.

dws Contributor

You are right about the testing. Most of the active posters here have had the experience of not being diagnosed by the tests used.

When your doctor says you may have 'non=coeliac gluten intolerance", he is probably refusing to acknowledge that his tests don't detect your illness. From your general symptoms you certainly sound coeliac to me, which means that you have to eat gluten free for the rest of your life. If indeed you are coeliac and have DH, I think that you can expect to see the rash return (perhaps with a vengeance) whenever you return to a gluten diet.

Perhaps not a typical location for a DH rash, but otherwise sounds like it. Most coeliacs are intolerant of milk, I'm not sure it is lactose intolerance, because Lactaid never made any difference for me. I am still intolerant of raw milk products but don't have a problem with cultured milk products like cheese or yougurt. Generally milk intolerance improves with a gluten free diet.

I am not sure it is lactose intolerance either. I have been somewhat confounded by my experiments with dairy. I seem to do best with aged cheese like cheddar which is low in lactose, but then I too have trouble with Lactaid which is supposed to be just as low in lactose. Yogurt does kind of so-so for me. I drank milk with no problem up to a few years ago, so I would question a casien problem- seems like it would have bothered me since childhood.
Metoo Enthusiast

I have recently had to go to a whole foods/non-processed diet due to my increased gluten sensitivity. I am one of those people who doctors do not think has celiac disease. The only blood work that I scored above normal was an IGG blood test(a pretty high positive). Negative on IGA's including TTG. Negative on genetic testing. No biopsy done while eating gluten because my doctor was sure my blood work pointed to non-celiac gluten intolerance rather than celiac. I accepted this diagnosis and was very happy with the disappearance of my intestinal symptoms when I stopped eating gluten. After abour 2 years, I began to struggle again and have been kind of on the run trying to stay ahead of the sensitivity curve, leading me after a lot of trial and error to a whole food diet which has helped a lot. I can't remember when I started having an angry, itchy, and sometimes painful red rash on either side of my nose where my nose meets my cheeks. I think it may have been about 15 years ago. Long before I eliminated gluten which was about 5 years ago. My doctor decided it was not Rosacea and gave me a strong antifungal cream which kept it somewhat at bay if I used it every day but never got rid of it. Well, with this final tweaking of my diet, the rash has gone away. Now I have gone back to wondering if I have Celiac after all and that they just don't know enough about it to exclude it with the current testing standards. I also have always had discolored tooth enamel with white bands. Lactose intolerance has also become a problem in the last couple of years. I know the location of the rash isn't typical for DH, but what do you folks think? Anybody had a similar rash?

I 'had' a small 1" diamter spot on my hand, that would blister, peel off, be all puffy and inflammed looking...then repeat that cycle over and over. It hurt too! Hurt like a burn would. My doctor passed it off as stress induced excema, said he had never seem an excema patch that concentrated though.

6 Months later I went gluten free and it dissapeared! Now it returns only when I eat gluten...and its spread it now covers more and more of my pink/side of hand when I eat gluten. (I am only on my 4th or 5th glutening) Now I seem to more sensative though too, bread crumbs were all over my kitchen from the kids...I broke out somehow from that.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,035
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    bostonbell
    Newest Member
    bostonbell
    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

    • Jmartes71
      Thankyou so much for your words.Its a hard battle when a supposed well known hospital whose celiac " specialist " has down played me because my colon looks fine and put it in my medical and so pcp doesn't take seriously. In their eyes we all carry that gene.Im having alot of bad days trying to be positive because of it.
    • Scott Adams
      Your experience is both shocking and critically important for the community to hear, underscoring the terrifying reality that cross-contamination can extend into the most unexpected and invasive medical devices. It is absolutely devastating that you had to endure six months of sickness and ultimately sustain permanent vision loss because a doctor dismissed your legitimate, life-altering condition. Your relentless research and advocacy, from discovering the gluten in MMA acrylic to finding a compassionate prosthodontist, is a testament to your strength in a system that often fails celiac patients. While the scientific and medical consensus is that gluten cannot be absorbed through the skin or eyes (as the molecules are too large to pass through these barriers), your story highlights a terrifying gray area: what about a substance *permanently implanted inside the body*, where it could potentially shed microparticles or cause a localized immune reaction? Your powerful warning about acrylic lenses and the drastic difference with the silicone alternative is invaluable information. Thank you for sharing your harrowing journey and the specific, severe neurological symptoms you endure; it is a stark reminder that celiac is a systemic disease, and your advocacy is undoubtedly saving others from similar trauma.
    • Scott Adams
      Those are driving distance from me--I will try to check them out, thanks for sharing!
    • Scott Adams
      I am so sorry you're going through this bad experience--it's difficult when your own lived reality of cause and effect is dismissed by the very professionals meant to help you. You are absolutely right—your violent physical reactions are not "what you think," but undeniable data points, and it's a form of medical gaslighting to be told otherwise, especially when you have a positive HLA-DQ2 gene and a clear clinical picture. Since your current "celiac specialist" is not addressing the core issue or your related conditions like SIBO and chronic fatigue, it may be time for a strategic pivot. Instead of trying to "reprove" your celiac disease to unwilling ears, consider seeking out a new gastroenterologist or functional medicine doctor, and frame the conversation around managing the complications of a confirmed gluten-free diet for celiac disease. Go in and say, "I have celiac disease, am strictly gluten-free, but I am still suffering from these specific complications: SIBO, chronic fatigue, dermatological issues, and high blood pressure linked to pain. I need a partner to help me address these related conditions." This shifts the focus from a debate about your diagnosis to a collaborative plan for your current suffering, which is the help you truly need and deserve to work toward bouncing back.
    • NanCel
      Hello, no I had to have them re done and then used a liner over the top.  Many dentists are not aware of the celiac effects.  Best of luck.   There is other material, yet, very expensive.
×
×
  • 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.