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News: Celiac.com: Gluten-free diet beneficial in T1D with concurrent celiac disease


Scott Adams

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(HealthDay)—For children with type 1 diabetes (T1D), the negative influence of celiac disease (celiac disease) on high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) ...

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    • trents
      The tTG-IGA is considered the centerpiece of celiac disease blood antibody testing. Your test results exceed 10x normal range so you could be officially declared to have celiac disease without going through an endoscopy/biopsy of the small bowel lining. As you used the term "bloods" to refer to your antibody testing, I am assuming you live in the UK and it has become common practice there since the COVID pandemic years to dispense with the endoscopy/biopsy when the tTG-IGA score reaches 10x normal. Though I would not go so far as to say it is yet a universal practice to do so. So, I would hold off on the gluten free diet until you find out if you will be required to undergo an endoscopy/biopsy of the small bowel. If you quit gluten now, healing of the small bowel lining will commence and it may generate a false negative biopsy by the time you get to the procedure. So, ask that question of your doctor. That is, if he feels a need to refer you to a GI doc for an endoscopy/biopsy.
    • GeoPeanut
      I had no idea! Thank you. 
    • Dc91
      Hi Cristina, 0-6.9 is normal range and I’m >100
    • cristiana
      Hello Dc91 and welcome to the forum! Could you first just add the lab ranges for us for your TTG IgA Antibodies as they vary?   Cristiana  
    • Dc91
      Sorry I should have said these bloods were taken Friday morning, a week after the first initial bloods. So I hadn’t starved myself of gluten before these bloods were taken. 
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