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knitty kitty

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Celiac.com - Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Support Since 1995

Everything posted by knitty kitty

  1. Welcome to the forum, @robingfellow and @Mr-Collateral531, I also had to have my gallbladder removed in emergency surgery. The gallbladder uses lots of thiamine vitamin b1 to function. The gallbladder cannot secrete bile if it doesn't have sufficient thiamine. Thiamine provides our muscles and glands energy to move and secrete needed enzymes...
  2. Welcome to the forum, @Karen Chakerian, We need more information, please. What homeopathic remedies or medications are you taking now? Do you still have the blood pressure and other symptoms? What is included in your diet currently? Dairy? Oats? Processed gluten free foods? Vegetarian? Other food allergies? Do you take vitamins? ...
  3. @SaiP, Insomnia is listed as one of the side effects of Loratadine. Niacin B3 in the form Tryptophan, Pyridoxine B 6, Folate B 9, Cobalamine B12, Magnesium, and Thiamine B 1 are needed to produce the sleep hormone melatonin. Insomnia can also be caused by low Vitamin D and low Vitamin A. A strict gluten free diet can be low in essential...
  4. @LoSmith, I understand, being on the spectrum myself. Please look into the work of Dr. Derrick Lonsdale and Dr. Chandler Marrs. https://hormonesmatter.com/add-adhd-common-problems-modern-childhood/ Thiamine helps immensely.
  5. @Matt13 I understand where you're coming from. Seemed I was reacting to all sorts of foods there for a while, but a low histamine Paleo diet really helps. We make histamine in our bodies as a useful neurotransmitter (causing alertness), and also as a response in the immune system. Histamine is made and released by Mast Cells. Mast Cells can...
  6. Welcome, @Morgan Tiernan, The best thing to clear my dermatitis herpetiformis is to take Niacin, Vitamin B 3, the form called nicotine acid, the kind that causes flushing of the skin. Flushing Niacin clears my skin quickly. Yes, the flushing might seem really strange, but it opens the tiny capillaries in the surface of the skin which helps remove...
  7. It might be understandable to say "friends or family weeded me or you out of their lives". Some people are fearful of getting out of their comfortable known lives and having to make changes to accommodate another. If they are too uncomfortable to walk a mile with me, I shake the dust off my feet and journey on. They're just not ready to learn that lesson...
  8. Hello, @Whyz, You're in the "hurry up and wait" part of diagnosis. The anxiety can be hard to deal with. Do you have a hobby? I like knitting. Watching suspense movies (Alfred Hitchcock movies are a favorite) helps focus that anxiety which gets resolved by the end of the movie, a temporary relief, but helpful. I have a small hernia, which won...
  9. @ShariW, Some of us react to corn the same as we react to gluten because maize and gluten share some similar segments which trigger the Celiac autoimmune response. Maize Prolamins Could Induce a Gluten-Like Cellular Immune Response in Some Celiac Disease Patients https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3820067/#:~:text=The current treatment...
  10. Have you tried Niacin? The form of niacin that causes flushing, nicotinic acid (not the same as nicotine in cigarettes) helps clear the tTg 3 IgA deposits out of the skin which causes the dermatitis herpetiformis blisters. (tTg 2 IgA is what blood tests for Celiac Disease measure). Niacin really helps heal and improve skin health. Niacin along with Benfotiamine...
  11. @TerryinCO, Pantoprazole is an acid suppressor, but Gerd is often caused by too little stomach acid, (hypochlorhydria), not too much. PPIs like yours suppress stomach acid production further, causing nutritional deficiencies. PPIs cause additional damage to the intestinal lining and can inhibit antibody production in the intestines resulting in low...
  12. Because of your anemia, you may not be making sufficient antibodies. I hope they did a total IgA as well as the tTg IgA, and DGP IgG. I hope you will share the results with us. If your body isn't making a large amount of antibodies, then the intestinal damage would be less as well. The antibodies attacking our own cells is what causes the damage...
  13. Welcome to the forum, @ellyelly! How much gluten were you eating in the weeks prior to the endoscopy? Many people with indeterminate results had cut down or eliminated gluten from their diet beforehand. This can lower the autoimmune response and decrease the symptoms (lower antibody levels, reduced inflammation and intestinal damage may heal). ...
  14. @TerryinCO, Are you taking a B Complex in addition to your B12? B 12 needs the other B vitamins to function correctly. Celiac disease and the damage to the intestines makes absorbing vitamins and minerals difficult. Talk to your doctor and nutritionist about supplementing while you're healing. Are you on any medication for your Gerd? Here...
  15. Bless your heart! That does make for a bumpy journey! The Takeda ALINAMIN EX Plus really works well for pain relief. I was surprised at how well it works. I can't recommend it enough. I can't tolerate aspirin nor nsaids. Are you getting enough Omega Threes in your diet? Healthy fats like olive oil help keep our discs and joints healthy and...
  16. Welcome to the forum, @trsprecker, I needed daily pain relief for three crushed vertebrae and found out that Thiamine, Pyridoxine, and Cobalamin (Vitamins B 1, B 6, and B12) have an analgesic effect. Mechanisms of action of vitamin B1 (thiamine), B6 (pyridoxine), and B12 (cobalamin) in pain: a narrative review https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih...
  17. Welcome to the forum, @TerryinCO, Have you been checked for nutritional deficiencies? Damage to the intestines like your doctor found affects the absorption of essential nutrients. Supplementing with B Complex, Vitamin D, and minerals like magnesium help ensure you are absorbing vitamins your body needs to heal. Weight loss is often seen in the malnutrition...
  18. Pancreatic elastase is a digestive enzyme that requires Thiamine Vitamin B 1 to be produced. Thiamine is needed to make insulin, too. Thiamine, Niacin B 3, and Pyridoxine B6 are needed to make digestive enzymes and turn carbohydrates, fats and proteins into energy for the body, and for repair and healing of the body. The Gluten free diet can be low in...
  19. @Sharke, The updated guidelines for a gluten challenge are to eat ten grams of gluten per day for two weeks minimum. Lesser amounts of gluten (3 grams) don't provoke an immune response strong enough that the antibodies leave the gastrointestinal tract and get into the blood where they can be measured in tTg blood tests. Have no doubt that the...
  20. @sillyyak52, Count another one in the same boat! My family has always been in denial. They said my tummy aches were a ploy to miss school. My parents passed from health problems associated with uncontrolled Celiac Disease (Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm and Glioblastoma brain tumor). My sister still has her head buried in the sand. I agree with...
  21. I take Life Extension brand Mega Benfotiamine, (250 mg with each of two meals) and Maxlife Natural TTFD-B1 Max Thiamine (100 mg). I try to take my Benfotiamine and TTFD before four pm, otherwise I have so much energy, it can be hard to fall asleep.
  22. Some people react to the Casein in dairy the same as to gluten, like me. I avoid dairy avidly because I get ataxia so bad. Some Celiac people produce tTg 6 antibodies in response to gluten or casein. tTg 2 antibodies are what blood tests for Celiac measure. tTg 6 antibodies are also found in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, contributing to ataxia...
  23. I agree that you were not eating sufficient gluten prior to your endoscopy.
  24. @Soleihey, Do get checked for thiamine deficiency. Blood tests for thiamine deficiency are not accurate. You can have "normal" levels in the blood, but still be deficient because thiamine stores inside cells are depleted. Thiamine deficiency can cause ataxia, tremor, muscle twitching, leg weakness, constipation, and slurred speech. I had these...
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