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dsepa730

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  1. Hi no he did the whole celiac panel that was the only one that was abnormal.

    That high of a tTG reading means that your body is manufacturing cells to destroy a basic enzyme in your small intestine. Confusion here is somewhat related to Celiac Disease being an actual physical manifestation of noticeable trauma as a result of your body attack itself. Your blood work basically shows that the process has begun whether or not the damage has built up or your GI actually noticed it. The disease itself has already started whether or not the symptom (damaged vili) has progressed to a noticeable amount.

    The colonoscopy will not tell you anything about celiacs but it can tell you if you are starting to experience secondary damage related to either celiacs or some other problem upstream. Your doctor may be pushing for the colonoscopy to rule out any other sort of malady related to your physical symptoms but in all honesty with that high of tTG antibodies he should have put you on a gluten-free diet first.

    Was IgA tTG the only celiac blood test he did? If so you should probably look for another doctor anyways.

  2. Hi thanks for replying, I'm only 24 . He said that he believes it just a false positive and that I shouldn't worry. I know I'm young but I'm miserable. So I guess I will just start the diet. I'm also thinking about getting a second opinion. Thanks again.

    With a postive ttg, you most likely are Celiac. False positives are very rare. Did you have a biopsy of the small intestine? If not, then your endo was not correct. Plus, even if you did, the small intesine is over 30 feet. You should have had a small intesine biopsy with at least 6 samples. Xrays will do no good in diagnosing Celiac. Why does he now want you to have a colonoscopy? IMHO, he should have done that at the same time as the endo, to save your body the wear and tear of anesthesia.

    How old are you? If you are approaching 50 or if you have a family history of colon cancer, then a colonoscopy is definitely in order. I don't think I have ever heard of a case with positive blood tests when it was not in fact Celiac. if I were in your shoes, I would start the diet post haste. If he wants to do the colonoscopy just because, I would say no thanks. Based on your symptoms and the positive blood test, I think you can safely assume you are Celiac. Unfortunately, some docs will not diagnose unless you have positive tests on every single lab and endo.

  3. HI my name is Dawn, I'm new to this forum, but have a few concerns and I was hoping that someone could help me out? I blood work for celiac disease in beginning of march. My Transglutaminase was 73.8 and they said it should be less than 15. My GI doctor told me I need to get a Upper End, it came back negative, he then made me go get a small bowel barium series x-ray, that to is negative. I have all the symptoms I have constipation,extremely low iron my ferritin is a 2, I get dry skin, migranes everyday. Now they want me to have a colonoscopy. Has anyone had this happen. Can the blood work be wrong the biopsy right or other way around. I'm so upset I keep going through all these tests, and no answer. I just want to feel better.

  4. Hi if someone could help me?? I went to a gastro doctor because I was having some GI problems and he tested me for Celiac disease one of the tests the Transglutaminase IgA came back extremely high, so they told me I needed a Endosocopy , I got one I got the results yesterday and he said that they are negative, but it still concerned because my blood results were high? Now tomorrow I have to have a small bowel barium xray series, to look at my all of my small intestines. Anyone ever have a negative endoscopy and then later get diagnosed with Celiac Disease?

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