Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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 Celiac.com!
    eNewsletter
    Donate

In The Process Of Diagnosis...high Iron?


aeon077

Recommended Posts

aeon077 Newbie

I always knew something wasn't right. But a couple weeks ago, I went into the doctor to get my prescription refilled for Nexium because my horrible stomach aches were starting to flare up again. When I visited my doctor and described my symptoms, which included the stomach pain, heartburn, loose BM's, sometimes blood in BM, he insisted that I visit a specialist for a colonoscopy. These symptoms come and go, and they've been going on for several years. Anyway, after doing a little bit of research before my appointment, I realized that these, along with lots of other problems I have, all described celiac disease. The specialist agreed with me, and decided to do both a colonoscopy and endoscopy, and take several biopsies. I'm still waiting on the results from the procedure, but he said that all he saw was a little inflammation, and everything else looked ok...and to wait on the results to see what is going on, on the microscopic level. He's still thinking it's celiac disease. We don't know for sure...but we'll find out! He also wants to go back and do blood testing.

So in the meanwhile, I got a call back from my regular doctor. They had decided to do a full iron panel because a prior blood test showed that I was anemic. They call me and tell me that my folic acid, ferrin, and something else was extremely high and to stop taking all iron vitamins/supplements. I also have to come back in to visit them about this. Funny thing...I'm not taking any supplements. I do every once in awhile, but it's only when I remember, which is seldom. I thought maybe it's my cereal? (It's usually fortified). Nope, 10% Iron. So I'm not sure what that is all about. And what confuses me is that if the other doctor thinks that I could have celiac disease, how do I have HIGH iron.

I read somewhere about a genetic connection between celiac disease and something called Hemochromotosis (Iron Overload). Does anyone know anything about this?

And just for the complete picture, here are my other symptoms:

Tourettes Syndrome, anxiety, Panic Disorder, Depression, Gastritis, chronic loose stools, anemia(???), fatigue, muscle aches, joint pain, vertigo, LOTS of canker sores, obesity, itchy patches on my skin that take over a month to go away, probably more...I'm a mess.

Thanks for any input!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



1974girl Enthusiast

I will be interested to read any responses from this. My dad has hemocromatosis (sp??) and I have the genes for celiac. My child has it. Dad has had a endo and they didn't see any signs but they didn't do blood work. They are not really concerned about his hemo. If he gets levels too high, then he just donates blood.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Takala Enthusiast

Google search

pubmed celiac hemochromotosis

pulls up a LOT of references.

Hemochromatosis and Celiac Disease

Many patients with celiac disease have iron deficiency anemia, a condition characterized by the body's inability to absorb iron. At the opposite end of the spectrum is a condition known as hemochromatosis, a genetic condition that causes your body to absorb too much iron. While it's uncommon, two case history reports, published in the April 1993 issue of the "Journal of the Florida Medical Association" and in the February 2004 issue of the "European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology," suggest that hemochromatosis may also be present in a small number of patients with celiac disease.

Open Original Shared Link

Here is a more recent cite on pubmed from 2004, the 2 patients with both diseases

Open Original Shared Link

What is really interesting is that it (hemochromatosis) might be a mutation to protect against anemia caused by celiac (or other diseases/conditions).

a 2002 paper in Gastroenterology by JR Butterworth, Cooper, Rosenberg,Purkiss, Jobson, Hathaway, Briggs, Howell,, Wood, Adams, Iqbal

The Role of hemochromatosis .... in celiac disease

Open Original Shared Link

In celiac disease, HFE gene mutations are common and are in linkage disequilibrium with different HLA alleles compared with controls. A disease-specific haplotype that carries C282Y and DQB1*02 is suggested. We propose that HFE gene mutations provide a survival advantage by ameliorating the iron deficiency seen in celiac patients.

A thread here on this site, with this subject

Yes, it is possible to have both conditions, although rare.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
aeon077 Newbie

Thank you so much for that info! I did do a bit of googling, and read several articles. What's interesting is that I fit the profile for Hemochromotosis... My entire family on both sides is basically from the "Celtic" region. Scotland, Ireland and GB. So we'll see...

I did speak with the doctor that did the Endo, and he was able to pull up the test results. He said that I also had high folate, which is odd. I couldn't find any relation.

I'm STILL waiting on biopsy results. We're stationed in Turkey right now, so things don't exactly move quickly here. I do know that they are going to run another blood panel to make sure the first wasn't a lab error. So we'll see. It's just driving me nuts not knowing. I really want to just try going gluten free, but if they decided to run blood tests, wouldn't that throw things off?

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Takala Enthusiast

Yes, going gluten free would possibly skew the CELIAC blood tests towards a false negative. It should not mess up the other tests. Has anyone done a celiac blood panel on you ?

No reason to make you wait on the second blood test for celiac.

Not unusual to have either a positive blood test result on one or more of the celiac blood panel tests, then yet a negative biopsy, and vice versa. (Just preparing you for the possibility that your biopsy will be "negative," while you still are sick.) The damage is patchy, and they have to take a sample from an area with damage. You may hit a snag with the specialist doctor then saying you cannot be celiac because you had a negative biopsy, so he/she won't do a full celiac blood panel test. Or he/she could be more proactive, and try again.

You can also have non-celiac gluten intolerance, which is a definite reaction to gluten, but it won't show up in the standard testing (at this time.)

If the rash is bad, you can get the skin next to a fresh outbreak biopsied, and a positive on that for DH is considered a positive test for celiac.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
abaker521 Rookie

I was diagnosed with Celiac back in September and just last week tested positive for primary hemochromatosis (I'm a C282Y homozygous, meaning I received the mutated gene from both parents). I never really got better despite going gluten free and I think it's because I have very elevated iron levels. I'm meeting with my doctor next week to figure out a course of action (if I need a liver biopsy or not). I'm only 27 so I'm happy I figured it out now I guess. Unfortunately, my father currently has stage four primary liver cancer, but I don't know if it's attributed to hemachromatosis or not. I hope not as his cancer might have been prevented if so. :(

Some of my symptoms include: bronzed/orange skin, irregular menstrual cycles, thinning hair, brain fog, metallic taste in mouth, joint pain, loose stools, depression and fatigue.

I am not thrilled that I have to get blood drawn.. but if it means I'll feel better then I'll try anything!

Link to comment
Share on other sites
nora-n Rookie

Hemochromatosis is on the same gene as celiac....

So many on HH forums have to go gluten-free because it causes gluten intolerance anyway.

Here is lots of info on HH, and you can be anemic and have hemochromatosis.

The joint pains tend not to go away.

Open Original Shared Link

and go and read the forum there.

HH is not so uncommon!

And so avoidable, with blood draws before there is significant damage

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • 2 weeks later...
aeon077 Newbie

Well, I finally got my biopsy results back from my doctor. He diagnosed me with Chronic Gastritis and then he said the biopsy from my terminal ileum showed an irregularity consistent with a food allergy. HMMMM So they took blood to do a panel of allergy tests, as well as a fecal fat test. They didn't have me change my diet, fast, or anything before hand, they just took it that day. Is that common?

I also had a follow up with my other doctor about my iron panel, which he had me go get blood drawn for again incase of a lab error.

It showed a slightly elevated Folate level, but it was the iron that totally threw him for a loop. He actually commented that he'd never seen this before and had no idea what could be wrong. I'm not totally sure that it could be HH, but maybe it's just because i'm only 32? And my Ferritin is normal. It's the actual iron saturation that is WAY off the charts. He kept asking me if I was taking Iron supplements...which I'm not. So I sit here and wait for the test results to come back again...

Here were the results:

Ferritin + Iron Panel

Iron Binding Capacity Unsaturated: 14 (L) mcg/dL Ref Range (110-370)

Iron: 357 (H) mcg/dL Ref Range (46-178)

Iron Binding Capacity Total: 371 mcg/dL Ref Range (260-430)

Iron Saturation: 96 (H) <i> % ng/mL Ref Range (20-50)

Ferritin: 49.8 <i> ng/mL Ref Range (15-150)

Hemolysis Index: Normal <i>

Lipemia Index: Trace <i>

Icteric Index: Normal

Thanks for the link Nora_n!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      121,214
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Julez13
    Newest Member
    Julez13
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • cristiana
      I think sometimes the pain described here can be a result of a sort of 'perfect storm' of contributing factors.  Recently I had an appalling bout of lower back pain, lower burning gut pain and what felt like cramps.  I then started to think about what could have caused it and I realised it was several things that had set it off: I'd been carrying heavy luggage (back strain); I had been sitting down in a car for too long and wearing a tight belt (I have pudendal nerve issues and sacroiliac issues and this exacerbates the pain), and I had bloating and burning pain in my colon caused by eating too much soy, latte and caffeine, I guess putting further pressure in the lower abdomen.  I had this same pain prior to my diagnosis and a couple of years post-diagnosis, I'd quite forgotten how unpleasant it was. 
    • cristiana
      HI @Kirbyqueen That's great news your insurance will be kicking in soon.  Sorry to see that you have been dealing with this for six months now, but I do hope you have managed to find some relief with some of the suggestions in the meantime. Perhaps come back and let us know what the doctor says. Cristiana
    • Scott Adams
      I agree, and hopefully your doctor will contact you soon about the next step, which will likely be an endoscopy to confirm your diagnosis. Do you have celiac disease symptoms? 
    • Kirbyqueen
      Still dealing with this rash on my legs. I've eliminated ringworm (through use of topical ointments). And I also know it's not shingles, as I've never had chickenpox before and I'm still fairly young. Through a lot of online research, I'm leaning more towards dermatitis herpetiformis, eczema, or psoriasis. I've actually got a doctor's appointment in May (finally got some insurance) and I'm going to bring it up then. I'm feeling really hopeful and excited to maybe be getting some relief soon.   Big thanks to everyone for the suggestions and positive thoughts!
    • trents
      You have three celiac disease specific antibody tests that are positive: Endomysial  Antibody IGA (aka, EMA), tTG-IGA, and tTG_IGG. Furthermore, your Immunoglobulin A at 55 is low, meaning you are IGA deficient. This one is not an antibody test for celaic disease per se but a measure of "total IGA" levels and if low (yours is low) it can suppress the individual antibody scores and even cause false negatives. So, yes, it definitely looks like you have celiac disease.   Do not yet begin a gluten free diet as your physician may refer you to a GI doc for an endoscopy/biopsy of the small bowel lining for confirmation of the antibody testing. This may help:   
×
×
  • Create New...