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

Had My Endoscopy- So Confused


Momma Bear

Recommended Posts

Momma Bear Rookie

Hello all. A little recap to my story- went to a new doctor last month, mentioned I stopped eating gluten a few months prior. He ran bloodwork (assuming it would show nothing) and was surprised to find really high antibody levels (endomysial, gliadins) as well as B12 deficiencies and almost non detectable levels of vitamin D. He told me point blank I had celiac and to eliminate all gluten from our home, but wanted me to have an endoscopy to assess the damage and evaluate my esophagus.

I had my endoscopy this week and when I mentioned to the nurse I have not had gluten in 6 months, she told me I was wasting their time. She said my bloodwork was probably a false positive and that I may just be sensitive (in a very condescending tone too!). After the scope the GI doctor told me I had damage from reflux and needed to start Prilosec. He also said that my intestines is healing and not completely flat (not entirely sure what he meant by that). My husband asked him if I still had celiac and he said yes but a little gluten would be fine. I am so confused by that. Is my doctor wrong?? Either my primary care has no clue or the GI doctor is clueless because I am hearing two completely different things. Any insight? Our lives were turned upside down almost two months ago when we eradicated all gluten in any form, from our home on top of no longer eating out. Was it a waste?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Roda Rising Star

If your diagnosed celiac you can not eat any gluten. It is autoimmune and by continuing to eat just a little will keep the antibody reaction happening. Your GI is stupid to say that a little would be fine.

tarnalberry Community Regular

If you have celiac, you cannot have gluten, period. You could call the GI back for clarification, but his statement, taken as-is, is wrong.

GottaSki Mentor

Wow. I am sorry for the confusion your endoscopy caused. You can not have a little gluten without causing further damage. I agree call your GI and have him explain the statement.

You were deficient in nutrients and you had positive antibodies even after removing gluten - the antibodies would likely have been much higher had you been tested before removing gluten. Remain gluten-free compliant and re-test your nutrients and celiac panel at either three or six months from the last blood work - your antibody numbers will likely decrease and your nutrients will improve - nutrients can take longer to bounce back - you may need to supplement.

That your villi is not completely flat is great news - either you have been healing or the damage was not yet severe or possibly a combo of both.

GottaSki Mentor

And I would report that nurse's comments to the nursing supervisor - she needs additional training on many levels. How dare she say that you are wasting their time. I've had endos twice since diagnosis at my doctors request and will likely have more in the years to come - at least until my small intestine shows improvement - that nurse has no idea what she is talking about. :angry:

Takala Enthusiast

I had my endoscopy this week and when I mentioned to the nurse I have not had gluten in 6 months, she told me I was wasting their time. She said my bloodwork was probably a false positive and that I may just be sensitive (in a very condescending tone too!). After the scope the GI doctor told me I had damage from reflux and needed to start Prilosec. He also said that my intestines is healing and not completely flat (not entirely sure what he meant by that). My husband asked him if I still had celiac and he said yes but a little gluten would be fine. I am so confused by that. Is my doctor wrong?? Either my primary care has no clue or the GI doctor is clueless because I am hearing two completely different things. Any insight? Our lives were turned upside down almost two months ago when we eradicated all gluten in any form, from our home on top of no longer eating out. Was it a waste?

No, you can learn from even bad experiences.

Your antibodies should drop on a gluten free diet, but... it takes time, and there is NO guarantee that they will drop completely in six months, especially if you are a newbie and not used to ferreting out cross contamination. False positives are rare. Damage from reflux is a symptom of celiac. Celiac auto immune reaction damages the lining of the intestines so the little points that are supposed to stick up end up going "flat." Not completely "flat" is good. If even the GI doctor after the scope and before they look at the slides for the biopsy says you have visible to the naked eye damage and that you have celiac.... you have celiac. Positive blood test and positive biopsy = standard diagnosis criteria by many. A little gluten is not "fine." Eliminating as much gluten as humanly possible from your diet is your goal, so you are exposed to as small amount of parts per million (microscopic amounts) as possible.

People vary in sensitivity. Some people can tolerate more potential of cross contamination than others, for example, they can eat something made in a facility which processed wheat or was tested to 20ppm gluten free, other people have to avoid much processed food, even if gluten free authentic, and do better with that which tests 5 ppm or less, in order to heal up. Others have to go further and get rid of gluten bearing cosmetics and toiletries, for example, I had to ban gluten containing lotion from the house, because I was getting served a glass of ice water which had been bare - handed by my spouse who had just used lotion after a bath, and there was enough residue to get me. I also got rid of shampoos and conditioners with wheat and oats, and changed to a mineral make-up, because I don't want the residue all over my skin and towels, and I fiddle with my hair a lot, and I have very, very sensitive skin. Coconut oil makes a great conditioner, if you are just now thinking "oh, no!"

Who knows what the GI doctor actually meant as it is not clear whether he meant potential cross contamination is "fine" or a small serving is "fine," either way, gluten, for you, is not "fine," anymore. :unsure: Your primary care physician is correct, no gluten.

Nurse has a bad attitude and should be re educated, but I wonder how many patients this doctor has made sick, or delayed healing of, if he's telling them a little gluten is okay. :angry:

mommida Enthusiast

If you are still going through testing, you need to continue eating gluten. The testing is to find damage caused from eating gluten. It is not worth going through testing procedures when you are on a gluten free diet. IMO Some patients with Celiac do continue having endoscopes to monitor damage. (there is a condition, "Celiac sprue" where damage has never fully healed from the gluten free diet)

There seems to be medical professionals who believe that fully gluten free can not be managed by most patients. This may have led to the confusing statement from your doctor. You need to avoid gluten for the rest of your life. Cross contamination, and accidents will happen during times. You have to make the best decisions on where and what to eat, because you do have to eat something.

You may now find that you have a severe reaction when getting small amounts of gluten, even if you had no symptoms before.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



1desperateladysaved Proficient

I am glad that you got such a definative answer with antibody and biopsy agreeing. I hope your worst health fears won't come and you will be healed. I hope you will absolutely have no gluten and your family will rally with you.

Diana

MitziG Enthusiast

Your bloodwoork was positive. Your endoscopy still showed some flattened villi even after 6 mos gluten free. You can't get much more positive than that.

Your GI is a dope however. You can not eat any gluten. None nada zilch. Ok?

Momma Bear Rookie

Thank you for the replies. I have no intentions of eating any gluten at all, ever! I am just so floored that a GI doctor could be so uneducated! I will not be going back to this office and I plan on talking to my primary care about everything that happened. I am taking this seriously because I have two young children that need a healthy mommy! I am having bloodwork done to re-check my antibody and vitamin levels in a few weeks and my primary care said we'll see where we go from there.

beachbirdie Contributor

If you have not already done so, I would get copies of the endoscopy report and read it for myself. There are some people here who can help interpret if you felt like sharing it.

The doc saying the "intestine was not completely flat" is not very useful except to acknowledge that there IS some damage! If you have damage, and you have antibodies, there is no doubt that you have celiac.

The doctor who told you a "little gluten is fine" is an absolute moron. As another poster said, even a little bit of gluten sets off an autoimmune reaction (NOT to be confused with allergy) that can last for MONTHS.

Then there is that nurse who said you were wasting her time. What a piece of work! She should be reported to superiors. Arrgghh.

Hope you'll be feeling really well soon!

Ugh. Dumb doctors.

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. - knitty kitty replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      10

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    2. - catnapt replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      10

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    3. - Wheatwacked replied to Jane02's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      13

      Desperately need a vitamin D supplement. I've reacted to most brands I've tried.

    4. - xxnonamexx replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      50

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

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

    • Total Members
      133,369
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Helen1984
    Newest Member
    Helen1984
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • knitty kitty
      @catnapt,  I'm sorry you're having such a rough time.   How much wheat germ and how much gluten were you eating? Lectins in beans can be broken down by pressure cooking them.  Do you pressure cook your beans?  Were you pressure cooking your wheat germ? What drugs are you taking?  Some immunosuppressive drugs affect IgA production.  Do you have anemia?
    • catnapt
      oops my gluten challenge was only 12 days It started Jan 21s and ended Feb 1st   worst 12 days of my life   Does not help that I also started on a thiazide-like drug for rule in/out renal calcium leak at the exact same time No clue if that could have been symptoms worse 🤔
    • Wheatwacked
      Welcome to the forum @Known1, What reaction were you expecting? Pipingrock.com High Potency Vitamin D3, 2000 IU, 250 Quick Release Softgels $6.89 I've have been taking the 10,000 IU for close to 10 years. When I started with vitamin D I worked my way up to 10000 over several weeks.  Even at 8000 I felt no noticeable difference.  Then after a few days at 10000 it hit Whoa, sunshine in a bottle.  celiac disease causes malabsorption of dietary D and you've poor UV access.  It took me from 2015 to 2019 to get my 25(OH)D just to 47 ng/ml.  Another two years to get to 80.  70 to 100 ng/ml seems to be the body's natural upper homeostasis  based on lifeguard studies.  Dr. Holick has observed the average lifeguard population usually has a vitamin D 3 level of around 100 ng/ml. Could it be that our normal range is too low given the fact that ¾ or more of the American population is vitamin D deficient? Your Calcium will increase with the vitamin D so don't supplement calcium unless you really need it.  Monitor with PTH  and 25(OH)D tests. Because of your Marsh 3 damage you need to ingest way more than the RDA of any supplement to undo your specific deficiencies. I believe you are in the goiter belt.  Unless you have reason not to, I recommend pipingrock's Liquid Iodine for price and quality.  The RDA is 150 to 1100 mcg.  In Japan the safe upper level is set at 3000 mcg.  Start with one drop 50 mcg to test for adverse response and build up.  I found 600 mcg (12 drops) a day is helping repair my body.  Iodine is necessary to healing.  90% of daily iodine intake is excreted in urine.  A Urine Iodine Concentration (UIC) can tell how much Iodine you got that day.  The thyroid TSH test will not show iodine deficiency unless it is really bad.  
    • xxnonamexx
      I don't know if I am getting sufficient Omega Threes. I read about  phosphotidyl choline may cause heart issues. I will have o do further research on heathy Omega 3 supplements or from foods. Is there a blood test that can tell you everything level in your system such as Thiamine, Benfotiamine levels etc? Thanks
    • catnapt
      If lectins were my problem, I would react to wheat germ (the highest source of wheat lectins) and beans. I don't. I only react to bread and pasta, which are the highest sources of gluten. Therefore, my issue is wheat-specific (Gluten/ATIs), not a general lectin issue.   I have eaten a supposedly high lectin diet (I say supposedly because lectin content in these foods is greatly reduced by proper cooking and I eat very few of those foods raw, and even then, rarely!!) for years. My health has improved greatly on my whole foods plant forward diet. I have asked all my drs and a registered dietician about my diet, asked if eating such a high amnt of fiber might interfere with the digestion of any other nutrients and the answer has always been NO.     while doing the gluten challenge I did not eat ANY wheat germ (since it doesn't have hardly any gluten, and I was too sick from the bread and pasta to want to eat much anyway) I will NOT put that poison in my body again. That was a horrific experience and if this is what most celiac patients have to deal with, I am very sorry for them I don't care if I have celiac or NCGS I won't intentionally cause myself that much pain and suffering it's not worth it.  
×
×
  • 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.