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Recently In Hospital And Still Confused


DonnaMM

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DonnaMM Explorer

So I have had GI problems for years and it used to be almost uncontrollable diarrhea like 20 times a day I went through celiac testing multiple times. Three blood tests and a EGD showed blunting but negative biopsies, the doctor said I could just have gastritis. Went on the diet anyway and saw improvement then added gluten back and I have had no problems what so ever. Recently I was in the hospital for rapid heart beat (over 250) short of breath (O2 of 88%). Found to also be anemic with a hemoglobin of 10.4 down from 11.8 six days prior. My iron was a little low 23 ( my lab says 25 is normal) with a normal TIBC normal transferrin and low iron saturation and extremely low ferritin of six. The doctor said I have iron deficient anemia due to malabsorption because I am not a vegetarian and my periods are not extremely heavy and I have never had this problem before. I am a little nervous because I have a history of lymphoma and I am not quite convinced about the celiac. I am a nurse and work on an oncology floor and have asked many doctors about the celiac and they too are not convinced but my hospital doctor swears its malabsorption. Anyone else been diagnosed just based on anemia? The problem with this is, I know iron deficiency anemia presents with anemia of chronic disease which can be present in malabsorption diseases as well as cancers. So I just want to know if anyone else has been diagnosed with totally negative results and been told they have it just based on anemia. Mind you my B12, folate and vit D are all normal.


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Chiana Apprentice

Are you aware that untreated celiac disease has been linked to several types of lymphoma?

If they can not find evidence that your cancer has returned and is directly causing the problem, you certainly have several celiac disease red flags. (Note: Everyone has different deficiencies with this disease. My b12 was very low, but my folate, d and iron were fine.)

DonnaMM Explorer

I am aware of the correlation with celiac and lymphoma but it was 7 years ago and my GI troubles didn't start until about a year after treatment. I believe mine was hereditary because my cousin had Hodgkin's lymphoma as well. I am just said cause I feel so socially isolated on this diet but I know I am at risk because I have a autoimmune thyroid condition, an autoimmune clotting condition an I am a danish (a ethnicity with a high rate of celiac disease)

DonnaMM Explorer

I guess I should be patient because I need to have an entire hematology and gastroenterology workup to determine any other source of bleeding

ravenwoodglass Mentor

But you didn't have totally negative results. You had blunted villi and you now are having issues with malabsorption and anemia. Your GI issues resolved on the diet. You say you aren't having GI issues after adding gluten back in but there are times when people, especially young people, will go through a honeymoon period for a long time before the GI issues appear again. Do get a full work up but after all your celiac related testing is done and then IMHO get back on the diet.

Findin my way Rookie

I am aware of the correlation with celiac and lymphoma but it was 7 years ago and my GI troubles didn't start until about a year after treatment. I believe mine was hereditary because my cousin had Hodgkin's lymphoma as well. I am just said cause I feel so socially isolated on this diet but I know I am at risk because I have a autoimmune thyroid condition, an autoimmune clotting condition an I am a danish (a ethnicity with a high rate of celiac disease)

Hi Donna,

Is the autoimmune clotting condition ITP? If you look around this board you'll find a larger percentage than the general population with this disease. I had it as a teenager myself.

Is the autoimmune thyroid problem Hashimoto's? That's very prevalent in the Celiac community too.

You've mentioned several autoimmune problems. Celiac leads to all kinds of autoimmune issues. Please be careful. You don't want to get worse. Look for a doctor who specializes in Celiac and have him/her look at your test results. I think you might find very different answers than the ones you've been given so far.

GFinDC Veteran

Um, you have

1. Villi blunting, a classic celiac symptom.

2. improvement on the gluten-free diet, good chance that means something about gluten is bad for you right?

3. Resumption of symptoms after returning to eating gluten. Not a cooincidence most likely.

4 Probably have malabsorbtion, classic celiac symptom.

5. Hashimoto's Thyroiditis, unfortunately also an associated AI disease among celiac women.

6. Doctors who don't believe you have celaac, pretty much a guarantee you have celiac! :)

6. Danish, and not the kind you get at a donut store.

You may have other symptoms that you aren't thinking about that can be related to celiac also. Like hair loss, menstrual irregularity, nail ridges, stiff joints, swelling in limbs, facial tics or muscle twitches, muscle cramps or pain, pale complexion, unexplained fatigue, anixety, depression, insomnia, confusion, forgetfullness, loss of balance, bags under eyes, ringing in ears, irritability, general distrust of doctors, :) craving for gluteny foods like bread, pizza, beer etc, hayfever or other allergies, susceptible to colds or flu more than other people, or don't get them as often as other people, weight gain or weight loss, eat a lot but not gain weight, or gain weght for no apparent reason, unable to leap tall buildings :), bad breath, skin rashes, irritable teeth/gums, sinus congestion, dry skin on elbows, knees or other areas, sleepy/tired more than normal, gassy, bloated, constipation, or diahrea, awful stomach upset during presidential debates, stomach ulcers, gastritis, throwing up after eating, staying close to a bathroom for reasons other than the wonderful aroma, spare change of clothes in your office for emergencies, fuzzy vision at times, slow healing of cuts or easy brusing, unexplained fainting or low blood pressure, too much aspirin in your medicine cabinet for a heathy person, lots of Pepto Bismol in your med cabinet or purse, migraines, oh well, you get the idea.

You don't need all these symptoms to have celiac, but any of them can be caused by it and more.

Some light reading:

FAQ Celiac com

https://www.celiac.com/gluten-free/forum-7/announcement-3-frequently-asked-questions-about-celiac-disease/

Newbie Info 101


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DonnaMM Explorer

Findin my way.... My clotting condition is lupus anticoagulant which gives me hypercoagulablity. Unfortunately mine with not go away like ITP sometimes does. I also talked with a doctor friend that said iron is absorbed in the duodenum which is were my blunted villi was found. Maybe I should just accept it since every other doctor I have seen thinks that's what I have I just can't seem to convince my GI doctor

GottaSki Mentor

6. Doctors who don't believe you have celaac, pretty much a guarantee you have celiac! :)

Quote of the Month Award should go to Paul :D

Donna - many of us test negative. The villi atrophy with other autoimmune disorders and improved symptoms while gluten free are all strong reasons to remove ALL gluten from your diet.

My daughter was diagnosed Lupus, RA and Fibro as a teen -- I have had severe AI symptoms my entire life -- until I was finally tested for Celiac Disease at 43 none of us even knew what gluten or celiac disease was.

My kids have all removed gluten and have all had some or all of their symptoms resolve - they all have negative blood work and mine was only weakly positive when finally diagnosed by blood along with TOTAL atrophy. Don't wait for your tests to prove you have Celiac Disease. Remove gluten now - the immune responses of this disease can take a very long time to improve, so the sooner the better.

Hang in there :)

mushroom Proficient

With all due respect to any gastroenterologists in the world who deserve it, from what I have seen and heard most of them have very little knowledge about celiac disease, and these are the ones who should have knowledge. They are all really "up" on ulcerative colitis and Crohn's and any other digestive tract disorder you care to name, especially those requiring colonoscopy :P ) but the day the celiac class was taught (if it was?) they played golf or slept after several days of being on duty (giving them the benefit of the doubt here), and what they will read in their out-of-date textbooks is that it is a failure to thrive disease of early childhood.

Like Lisa, regardless of what the testing says, I believe you have it, and should trial gluten free right now before you damage yourself further, or end up like me with psoriatic arthritis which requires an annual continental migration to get treatment for.

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