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How Long Till He Starts To Feel Better? (Anemia Goes Away, Etc.)


lynnedays

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lynnedays Newbie

Hi,

 

My 4 year old son was just diagnosed with celiac disease. We had blood work done twice, endoscopy with biopsy, etc. He has been on a strict gluten free diet for about a week. He is very anemic, has had very slow growth the last 2 years, has the typical "pot belly", etc.  His stomach aches have already stopped...but I was curious when the anemia, pot belly, and growth, etc. might start to resolve. What was your experience?

 

Thanks so much.


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shadowicewolf Proficient

Hi,

 

My 4 year old son was just diagnosed with celiac disease. We had blood work done twice, endoscopy with biopsy, etc. He has been on a strict gluten free diet for about a week. He is very anemic, has had very slow growth the last 2 years, has the typical "pot belly", etc.  His stomach aches have already stopped...but I was curious when the anemia, pot belly, and growth, etc. might start to resolve. What was your experience?

 

Thanks so much.

It can take a while. A few months to maybe a year or so.

cyclinglady Grand Master

It took me about six months to stop being anemic and I was taking iron supplements.  Has the doctor suggested iron?  Has he been tested for other vitamin and mineral deficiencies?  

lynnedays Newbie

Yes - the doctor has him on an iron supplement - adult dose.He is also taking a multivitamin. I just was curious -  as I know it takes time for the gut to heal for him to even be able to absorb his nutrients/vitamins/iron. I was hoping he would start to feel better in weeks vs months.  :/  But I understand this may be a long process.

GottaSki Mentor

Welcome Lynn!

Your son may feel better within weeks rather than months. Young kids tend to improve quickly once all gluten is removed. Learn all you can about how to keep him gluten-free and preventing cross-contamination. Take a look at the "newbie 101" thread:

https://www.celiac.com/forums/topic/91878-newbie-info-101/

It will take some time to correct nutritional deficiencies, but you will likely see symptom improvement in the coming weeks.

Hang in there Mom!

lynnedays Newbie

Thank you so much!  We are trying to be strictly gluten free but there is def. a learning curve. I didn't realize his gummy flint stone vitamins had it....so I replaced those last weekend....and then today he got a nibble off another child's cracker at school. He is still learning too - that he can't take bites off other people's food they offer, the snack table, can't have foods he used to have, etc. It's just so hard - as you want them to heal ASAP but there is this long learning curve too! We have removed all items with gluten in our house....but have to replace the toaster this weekend. 

 

I'm so happy we found out what was making him ill...and making the change to gluten free wasn't too hard (as I already cook/don't' eat out much, etc.) but the lifestyle change for him is hard. I've bought children's books about being gluten free, etc. to try to help him understand...but he just turned 4 last month...so the truth is the maturity of remembering not to eat other food without asking mommy first or given to him by the teacher (for snack) is tough.

 

I just can't wait for him to feel better. My stomach just drops every time I find out he's been glutened a little bit either because I made a mistake or he did (learning curve). I know it just slows the healing down. Frustrating.

 

 

Welcome Lynn!

Your son may feel better within weeks rather than months. Young kids tend to improve quickly once all gluten is removed. Learn all you can about how to keep him gluten-free and preventing cross-contamination. Take a look at the "newbie 101" thread:

https://www.celiac.com/forums/topic/91878-newbie-info-101/

It will take some time to correct nutritional deficiencies, but you will likely see symptom improvement in the coming weeks.

Hang in there Mom!

GottaSki Mentor

It is indeed frustrating! I can tell you it gets better with time. For now try not to be too hard on yourself --- mistakes will happen, but they will become fewer and farther between as time goes on.

Often the reactions to small amounts of gluten become worse...which is no fun, but does help to reinforce the need to be completely gluten-free ... 4 year olds learn very quickly...he'll become a more confident celiac...again with time.

Sounds like you are off to a great start...keep up the great work and let us know if we can help :)


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GottaSki Mentor

PS....if you are going gluten free with him you should have a complete celiac antibody panel before removing gluten as celiac disease is genetic.

lynnedays Newbie

PS....if you are going gluten free with him you should have a complete celiac antibody panel before removing gluten as celiac disease is genetic.

 

Yes - I was going to talk to my childrens pediatrician about this (or gastro) as he has a 2.5 year old sister. She isn't showing any signs like he was even at that age (looking back now - pot belly, loose poop issues, etc.) but I worry about it as the house is gluten free now. She is getting gluten containing snacks at school though...so I think I can get her tested anyway. My husband was diagnosed with IBS 10 years ago. They tested him for celiac at the time and he came back "borderline" on the blood results. They told him he could try a gluten free trial to see if it helped...he did for a short stint and said it didn't....so that was that and he just took the IBS diagnosis and moved on. But - now that our child has been positivly diagnosed...I'm thinking he should consider being retested.

GottaSki Mentor

Yes - I was going to talk to my childrens pediatrician about this (or gastro) as he has a 2.5 year old sister. She isn't showing any signs like he was even at that age (looking back now - pot belly, loose poop issues, etc.) but I worry about it as the house is gluten free now. She is getting gluten containing snacks at school though...so I think I can get her tested anyway. My husband was diagnosed with IBS 10 years ago. They tested him for celiac at the time and he came back "borderline" on the blood results. They told him he could try a gluten free trial to see if it helped...he did for a short stint and said it didn't....so that was that and he just took the IBS diagnosis and moved on. But - now that our child has been positivly diagnosed...I'm thinking he should consider being retested.

I agree....once gluten is reduced significantly it can affect the antibody tests. If everyone feels better gluten-free - great - except you lose this data and may need to perform a gluten challenge if a diagnosis is needed in the future - which can be extremely difficult.

I'd vote for complete antibody panels all around. Your primary can order these tests.

blmoreschi Apprentice

It sounds like you're doing a great job! My daughter (11) also had mild anemia, osteoporosis and slow growth. It's been 6-1/2 months since she was diagnosed, and her tTG went from 99 down to 6, her anemia is gone, and she grew 1-1/2 inches and gained 7 pounds! She also has so much more energy and we saw that difference within the first month. I've definitely read that kids heal faster, and I asked the Peds GI at our 6 month check-up if her low tTG meant that her small intestines are healed. He said yes. So keep up the good work and I bet you start noticing big changes in him soon!

 

(As a side note, the bone density doesn't respond as quickly, but hopefully at 4 that isn't too much of an issue for him. She had her first 2 fractures - in the same arm at the same time - at age 3-1/2 - so we definitely trace her Celiac back to a 3 week bout of diarrhea when she was about 6 months old.)

cyclinglady Grand Master

It sounds like you're doing a great job! My daughter (11) also had mild anemia, osteoporosis and slow growth. It's been 6-1/2 months since she was diagnosed, and her tTG went from 99 down to 6, her anemia is gone, and she grew 1-1/2 inches and gained 7 pounds! She also has so much more energy and we saw that difference within the first month. I've definitely read that kids heal faster, and I asked the Peds GI at our 6 month check-up if her low tTG meant that her small intestines are healed. He said yes. So keep up the good work and I bet you start noticing big changes in him soon!

 

(As a side note, the bone density doesn't respond as quickly, but hopefully at 4 that isn't too much of an issue for him. She had her first 2 fractures - in the same arm at the same time - at age 3-1/2 - so we definitely trace her Celiac back to a 3 week bout of diarrhea when she was about 6 months old.)

That's great news!  I'm so happy for your daughter!  Good job, Mom!

lynnedays Newbie

Good news! We went for his 2 week followup with the gastro (from last visit when he had the endoscopy)...and he's gained 4lbs! Still stomach distension (belly) but she thinks as he heals up and there is more food being absorbed the  belly will decrease! Wants to rerun blood work in 3 months to verify anemia has resolved and other numbers have normalized.

 

He is eating like a horse lately....I guess because the stomach aches are gone...so I'm not surprised he put on some weight - but 4lbs! sheesh!  :o)

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