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Celiac Disease Vs. Wheat Allergy?


peanut-gallery

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peanut-gallery Newbie

My daughter is about 15 months old and has had trouble with food allergies since about 6 months old. She has had difficulty sleeping, belly pain, and diarrhea for several months. We just went back to her allergist yesterday and she most recently tested positive for wheat, oat, egg, turkey, and apple allergies. She had her blood drawn for a celiac panel and total IgA today. The celiac panel won't be back for a few days but I was able to get her IgA results and they are low. I know this means that her celiac test results will be unreliable if they are negative, but also that it means she is more prone to auto immune disorders. Her diet is currently extremely limited due to all of her food allergies. For the time being, she was actually just put back onto a hydrolyzed formula that is already broken down into amino acids so her body doesn't need to work to digest anything. It breaks my heart seeing her have so many issues so young. My question however is, with her testing positive to a wheat allergy, will that change the consequences of her diet/lifestyle, potential symptoms whether or not she tests positive for celiac disease? Hoping some other parents have gone through similar things and can offer some guidance. Thanks,


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Mom2J112903 Newbie

A wheat allergy the child can outgrow but the treatment is the same as it would be if Celiac's came back positive. A stritcly gluten free diet is ordered for both. We started with low IgA levels and a positive allergy testing to wheat. Then found damaged celia on scope, not enough to properly dx Celiac however. Based on clinical symptoms and the previous findings on scope, he is "dx" Celiac.

peanut-gallery Newbie

Thank you.

auzzi Newbie

Wheat allergy is a "blanket" term. Many parts of the wheat plant can cause allergies.

Wheat-allergic people have an IgE-mediated response to wheat protein. There are four main proteins.

Protein allergies:

* Prolamins [various types of gliadins][α-,β- and γ-gliadins are all connected with coeliac disease]

* glutelins [glutenin is the predominant allergen in wheat]

* Albumin allergy [a few different types]

* globulin allergy

{And then there are Wheat Pollen & grass allergies - lots of them}

You need more information. Some wheat allergies you do not outgrow ..

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