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trents

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

Everything posted by trents

  1. Walter, are you taking any vitamin and mineral supplements? Have you been checked for anemia?
  2. Your numbers are unequivocal for celiac disease. I see no reason for you to have an endoscopy/biopsy. But you do need to concentrate or cleaning up any remaining cross contamination sources of gluten and identifying any other food intolerance crossovers you may have.
  3. jeriM, the numbers look high enough to be pretty conclusive for celiac disease but without the reference ranges for what the lab used as negative vs. positive, we can't say for certain. Labs used different reference ranges so can you post those as well?
  4. Yes, kissing can get you glutened. I wouldn't throw away your cookware. I would scrub it real good though, especially wooden and cast iron stuff. Only the very most sensitive celiacs have to worry about throwing cookery away. Wait and see how you react using what you have. I think you aren't really that close yet in eliminating other sources of CC besides...
  5. I do not know the answer to that. It might depend on how fresh the breakout is. Can you describe the rash for us? DH has little blisters in the rash.
  6. Reaction to oats can be caused by the oat protein itself, not an CC with gluten.
  7. Wheatwacked, are you advocating the diet in Table1? I do not believe avoiding fats is a good idea. Fat soluble nutrients require fats.
  8. There's really no point in that as the B-vitamins are water soluble and there's rally no risk of overload toxicity. You just pee out any extra not used. We now know that large oral doses of B12 accomplish the same things as injections. To prescribe B12 injections for pernicious anemia tells me the doctor is operating from an outdated knowledge base.
  9. Anne, Costco's Nature Made brand of supplements will state that a product is gluten free if it is. And most of their Nature Made products at Costco are gluten free.
  10. Yes, it could be. If they don't specify the source of the starch (wheat? corn? potato?) I would not trust it. Contact the manufacturer to get a definitive answer. Even then, their formulation can change over time. In the U.S. most "modified food starch" is made from corn. I'm thinking that more recent FDA regulations required the source to be specified by...
  11. Dermatitis Herpetiformis (DH) is definitive for celiac disease. There is no other known cause for it. So if driftwood7 has DH then there is no question that celiac disease, not NCGS, is the culprit behind the symptoms. So, another Dx rout would be to have the rash biopsied for DH.
  12. Have you checked to make sure your vitamins and supplements are gluten free? Wheat starch is sometimes used in pills as a filler.
  13. You have discovered, as many of us have, that once you get off gluten, the symptoms are worse if you go back on. We lose whatever tolerance to it we had. Do you need an official diagnosis for some reason? Seems to me your experience tells you what you need to know.
  14. Beware that if you go gluten-free for six months and then go back on it for testing, your symptoms will likely be more intense. We tend to lose whatever tolerance to gluten we once had if we go off it for any length of time.
  15. Yes, your GP can order a celiac antibody blood test but he/she seems to have deferred to a GI. But you must have been eating 2 slices of wheat bread (or the equivalent) daily for 6-8 weeks prestest for it to be valid. Ask him to order the tTG-IGA, the total serum IGA and Deamidated gliadin peptide (DGP IgA and IgG). https://celiac.org/about-celiac-disease...
  16. Unfortunately, most general practitioners are pretty ignorant about celiac disease and testing for it. We often here the story from forum participants that their doctor did not give them proper information for a pretest gluten challenge and many patients drop gluten to alleviate their symptoms before they get tested. Then the tests come back negative and...
  17. Gluten allergy? Do you mean celiac disease? Celiac disease is not an allergy. It is an autoimmune disorder in which inflammation in the lining of the small bowel is triggered by the ingestion of gluten. The inflammation damages the villi that line the small bowel and also produces antibodies which can be detected by a blood test. Actually, there are several...
  18. Anne Jorey, This might be helpful to you: Oats (even gluten free oats), dairy and eggs are some other foods that commonly give celiacs problems so you might look at those with regard to your symptoms if they continue.
  19. Welcome to the forum, Anne Jory! I have not heard that the vaccine triggers celiac disease but I think there is still a lot we don't know about the effects of the vaccine long term. I believe we do know that people who have celiac disease are more susceptible to contracting COVID and we also know that those with the genetic potential for celiac...
  20. Seems like you have all the evidence you need to make a connection between the two. Your daughter may also have NCGS for which there is no test yet.
  21. I think it would not have much affect on the endoscopy/biopsy results if you would take a day or two off each week until the test. But do you absolutely need the additional confirmation when your antibody tests were both positive?
  22. But even if you have NCGS it doesn't really change the way you need to approach eating. Having NCGS instead of celiac disease does not mean you have a license to be less than diligent in avoiding gluten. NCGS can still do physical damage to you, just not to the villi of your duodenum. NCGS can do damage in other ways to one's body. I think I am correct in...
  23. Welcome to the forum, Elmarie! How can we help you? Did you have questions about testing for celiac disease?
  24. Welcome to the forum, Lucy58! Have you considered that you might not have celiac disease but NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity) instead. They share many of the same symptoms but NCGS does not damage the small bowel villi so there are no antibodies produced and there is no diagnostic test for NCGS. Celiac disease must first be ruled out before a conclusion...
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