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 Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

6 Mo Blood Work - Labeled "Non Compliant"


StressedByCeliac

Recommended Posts

StressedByCeliac Newbie

I am so stressed and frustrated! I was diagnosed with Celiac last October. I have been vigilantly gluten free since diagnosis. I did not have a "miraculous" improvement in my health as so many people told me I would. I do feel better today then I did 6 months ago, but it's been little steps.

Earlier this week, I had my second set of blood tests to see how things were going. My doctor's office called me and told me that the blood work shows I have been "non compliant" with my gluten free diet. I can't tell you how devastated I am. I feel like I'm starting all over again. What does my "non complaint" diet look like? I only eat single ingredient foods unless they are specifically labeled gluten free, or that I have researched with the vendor. When I travel, I pack all my own food. I don't eat at other people's homes, even skipping holiday meals with extended family. My husband and children are gluten free, as I've banned all gluten containing food from the house. I have eaten out less then 5 times in the last 6 months and only at restaurants that have excellent reputations for gluten free.

When my doctor's office called, they asked if I wanted to meet again with a nutritionalist. Honestly, no, I don't. The woman I met with after my diagnosis knew less about celiac then I did after reading through the Celiac Disease Center's welcome packet, that I registered for because I had to wait a month to see a nutritionalist. Then they asked me if I was eating bread, or pasta, or pizza. As though I was a total idiot.

I'm frustrated and don't know where I'm going wrong, and I don't feel like I'm going to get any help from my doctor, who I'm still waiting to call back since they didn't know what to say after I told them I was following a gluten free diet.

The one area I have been lax in is prescription medication. I'm trying to track down whether any of the 3 meds I'm on could be the cause of the issue, but given that we are heading into a holiday weekend, I get to simply sit and stew until Monday.

Any insight into what else to try next?

Initial blood work from Oct:

TTA IgA = 34 (High) TTA IgG = 59 (High)

Blood work from this week:

TTA IgA = 6 (Normal); TTA IgG = 25 (High)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



tessa25 Rising Star

Those numbers are fantastic for 6 months! Keep up the good work. As long as your numbers are going down your doing fine. And your TTG IGA is normal, fantastic.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

You haven't even been 6 months gluten free. The fact that your IGA is in the normal range shows that you are doing pretty good on the diet. It can take time for antibody levels to get back to normal levels and your IGG is half what it was at diagnosis.

Do read the Newbie 101 thread at the top of the Coping section just to be sure you are not missing anything. Also you mention that you are still having symptoms are you eating oats? dairy? soy? those are common intolerances for some of us. Maybe try eliminating them and then adding them back in one at a time and see if you notice a reaction.

Try not to let whomever said you were non-compliant bother you. IMHO they did follow up testing too soon.

Audrey’s Mom Rookie

My daughter was diagnosed via scoping and biopsy in August.  Her levels in June were over 100.  She’s now at 28 when she was tested earlier this month.  It sounds like you’re on track and your numbers are lowering.  My daughter’s Dr. was pleased with her results.  Hang in there.  We’ve been told it could easily take a year to start to feel better.

Ennis-TX Grand Master

I noticed after a exposure it can take about a month or more for my symptoms to go away in some areas. Others have the same thing, antibodies can take months to go down. I have seen many over the years where some take longer, if you have a tiny amount of gluten slipping in it can raise the numbers a bit. As Raven suggested double check everything, is you makeup and shampoo safe? Might sound retarded but if you touch the stuff then your food you will get slight CC.  Is a condiment jar CCed? Perhaps a common piece of cook ware....I CCed a hand blender once and kept making myself sick for awhile til I tossed it. I have also ran into "Gluten Free" foods that were made on equipment that handled wheat and I got sick then my Nima flagged it to me. I have also have certified gluten free hemp protein make me sick after eating it for a week then the Nima flagged it when I tested it...took over 2 months to recover from each of those exposures in the last half year....and I have been on this diet for almost 5...it happens to the best of us.

pikakegirl Enthusiast

First I send my sympathy. 10 years ago i was diagnosed and sent home being told dont eat gluten with no health plan or follow up. I took it upon myself to research like a maniac. It took 6 months for my blood work to get normal. I too began by eating single ingredient foods, dont eat out or anything anyone else made. I have silent Celiac so cant afford to risk trying foods since i have no way of knowing if i was glutened. Please dont blame yourself, this is a hard disease to manage. I even Elisa tested each food as i added it to my diet such as rice or rice noodles from a factory. I have not found any perscriptiin drug that has changed my 6 month blood work. Over the counter meds and supplements are more risky. I got much worse at first and thought i had refractory sprue but i was just healing which feels like dying in my case. I lost 90 pounds after gluten free. I started to turn around at year 7. Every journey seems unique and handling the mental aspect takes lots of hope, stamina and degerminatikn to love and help yourself. I have not found any of this from the medical community as of yet. This group helps me all the time even 10 years in i learn new helpful things here. You can do this! The body wants to heal and is a remarkably great at it. Your numbers are going in the right dirctikn so you are suceeding!

StressedByCeliac Newbie

I want to thank everyone who responded. I am still eating dairy (not a lot) and have never noticed an issue with it. I confess I don't know about soy - I haven't paid a lot of attention to what does or does not have soy. I have (not often) eaten other grains - corn meal, oats, quinoa, etc - but have always stuck with certified gluten-free varieties. I have not tackled cosmetics, skin care, hair care, etc. I did get rid of my stoneware and cast iron when cleaning out the kitchen, but most of the rest of my cookware and utensils were not replaced. 

In general, I guess there's always *more* to do. I will also go back and re-read the Intro and take a pass through my cabinets to make sure I've been as vigilant as I think I have.

I guess my biggest frustration is that I was just starting to emotionally feel OK with the whole never having a "real" pizza again and this just felt like a slap in the face. And it highlights again the lack of knowledge in the medical community around this disease - and actual support for those managing it.

Taking a deep breath... and carrying on.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kareng Grand Master
4 hours ago, StressedByCeliac said:

I am so stressed and frustrated! I was diagnosed with Celiac last October. I have been vigilantly gluten free since diagnosis. I did not have a "miraculous" improvement in my health as so many people told me I would. I do feel better today then I did 6 months ago, but it's been little steps.

Earlier this week, I had my second set of blood tests to see how things were going. My doctor's office called me and told me that the blood work shows I have been "non compliant" with my gluten free diet. I can't tell you how devastated I am. I feel like I'm starting all over again. What does my "non complaint" diet look like? I only eat single ingredient foods unless they are specifically labeled gluten free, or that I have researched with the vendor. When I travel, I pack all my own food. I don't eat at other people's homes, even skipping holiday meals with extended family. My husband and children are gluten free, as I've banned all gluten containing food from the house. I have eaten out less then 5 times in the last 6 months and only at restaurants that have excellent reputations for gluten free.

When my doctor's office called, they asked if I wanted to meet again with a nutritionalist. Honestly, no, I don't. The woman I met with after my diagnosis knew less about celiac then I did after reading through the Celiac Disease Center's welcome packet, that I registered for because I had to wait a month to see a nutritionalist. Then they asked me if I was eating bread, or pasta, or pizza. As though I was a total idiot.

I'm frustrated and don't know where I'm going wrong, and I don't feel like I'm going to get any help from my doctor, who I'm still waiting to call back since they didn't know what to say after I told them I was following a gluten free diet.

The one area I have been lax in is prescription medication. I'm trying to track down whether any of the 3 meds I'm on could be the cause of the issue, but given that we are heading into a holiday weekend, I get to simply sit and stew until Monday.

Any insight into what else to try next?

Initial blood work from Oct:

TTA IgA = 34 (High) TTA IgG = 59 (High)

Blood work from this week:

TTA IgA = 6 (Normal); TTA IgG = 25 (High)

Your doctor’s office are idiots.  Those are going in the right direction.  See how they are in another 6 months.  Also, do you have any other autoimmune diseases that might impact them?  

 

Maybe you did mess up the first month or so... that is to be expected.  Also, antibodies can continue to climb for a few weeks when you first go gluten-free.  There isn’t a lot of research on how long it takes to stop making antibodies when gluten-free.  The researcher said that was an interesting side finding to their study, but that wasn’t what they were looking at so they didn’t keep following the test subjects.

 

a study was done not long ago that found that almost no medication -prescription or over the counter , contained gluten.  You should still check, but it’s probably not that.  

psawyer Proficient

I am not aware of any med, whether OTC or by prescription, that contains gluten.

Gemini Experienced

I agree with Kareng........your doctor’s office clearly have no clue what they are talking about and could certainly be classified as idiots.  Your numbers are fine.......really.  In fact, if they were really that good at what they do, they would know to  run more than the paltry tests that are not really for compliance.  They should also be running the DGP which actually tests for dietary compliance.  It is the test to see reaction to gluten in your diet.  The tTg tests for damage to the intestine and we all know how long that can take to get to normal. But a 6 on the IgA, from a high of 34 in only 6 months and they think that is non-compliant????????  In what universe?

Keep on doing what you are doing because you are doing things right.  Do not let this set you back mentally.  You may want to get a new doctor or at least have him tell his office staff to educate themselves before opening their mouths.  Keep calm and carry on.......you’re good!

Johnny55400 Apprentice
14 hours ago, StressedByCeliac said:

I am so stressed and frustrated! I was diagnosed with Celiac last October. I have been vigilantly gluten free since diagnosis. I did not have a "miraculous" improvement in my health as so many people told me I would. I do feel better today then I did 6 months ago, but it's been little steps.

Earlier this week, I had my second set of blood tests to see how things were going. My doctor's office called me and told me that the blood work shows I have been "non compliant" with my gluten free diet. I can't tell you how devastated I am. I feel like I'm starting all over again. What does my "non complaint" diet look like? I only eat single ingredient foods unless they are specifically labeled gluten free, or that I have researched with the vendor. When I travel, I pack all my own food. I don't eat at other people's homes, even skipping holiday meals with extended family. My husband and children are gluten free, as I've banned all gluten containing food from the house. I have eaten out less then 5 times in the last 6 months and only at restaurants that have excellent reputations for gluten free.

When my doctor's office called, they asked if I wanted to meet again with a nutritionalist. Honestly, no, I don't. The woman I met with after my diagnosis knew less about celiac then I did after reading through the Celiac Disease Center's welcome packet, that I registered for because I had to wait a month to see a nutritionalist. Then they asked me if I was eating bread, or pasta, or pizza. As though I was a total idiot.

I'm frustrated and don't know where I'm going wrong, and I don't feel like I'm going to get any help from my doctor, who I'm still waiting to call back since they didn't know what to say after I told them I was following a gluten free diet.

The one area I have been lax in is prescription medication. I'm trying to track down whether any of the 3 meds I'm on could be the cause of the issue, but given that we are heading into a holiday weekend, I get to simply sit and stew until Monday.

Any insight into what else to try next?

Initial blood work from Oct:

TTA IgA = 34 (High) TTA IgG = 59 (High)

Blood work from this week:

TTA IgA = 6 (Normal); TTA IgG = 25 (High)

I am in the same about situation. After 2 months of gluten free diet my TTG (Anti-Transglutaminase)  is now a "6". Before it was 34. My doctor told me that it was a great improvement. Si I will assume the same in your case. My  endomysal antibody titer is : 140 now. My doctor told me that it was not a problem. She know wants me to be 8 weeks on regular diet with gluten. She wants to do another endoscopy and blood test. Not sure exactly what she wants to test...

cyclinglady Grand Master
1 hour ago, Johnny55400 said:

I am in the same about situation. After 2 months of gluten free diet my TTG (Anti-Transglutaminase)  is now a "6". Before it was 34. My doctor told me that it was a great improvement. Si I will assume the same in your case. My  endomysal antibody titer is : 140 now. My doctor told me that it was not a problem. She know wants me to be 8 weeks on regular diet with gluten. She wants to do another endoscopy and blood test. Not sure exactly what she wants to test...

Something is definitely not adding up.  Your previous posting stated an elevated TTG (31) and EMA.  Your biopsy was suggestive of celiac if I can recall.  No celiac-savvy GI would make you go back on a gluten diet and then do everything all over again.  You should know exactly what she wants to test.  

Either you are not communicating everything correctly to us or your should seriously consider getting a new Gastroenterologist.  

Johnny55400 Apprentice

My Gastroenterologist is quite competent and has excellent reviews on several sites. I am just stating what the blood report said: after two months on a gluten free diet my TTG went from 31 to 6. Since I do not have any symptoms, she wants to make sure that I do have celiac. Before my first test, I was taking a huge amount of Naproxen and I asked her if that could have an impact on my elevated TTG. She was not sure. After two more months on gluten diet and no naproxen if my TTG is up again, it will confirm that I do have celiac. I am not a specialist and new on this. I hope that what she wants to do makes sense. 

GFinDC Veteran

Hi Johnny,

Perhaps you can ask for a consult by another doctor?  Going back on gluten for a testing is called doing a gluten challenge.  The University of Chicago celiac center recommends a 2 week gluten challenge for an endoscopy and 12 weeks for blood testing.  Open Original Shared Link

Rather than put your body through a gluten challenge and suffer more possible damage to your body, it makes sense to seek a 2nd opinion first.  Try to find a celiac doctor in your area to review your first tests and see what they think.  It sounds like your doctor is not real familiar with celiac diagnosis IMHO.

While you don't have symptoms, that doesn't mean damage isn't happening.  Your condition of not having symptoms is called silent celiac.

The reason I suggest avoiding a gluten challenge is that often people, who start the gluten-free diet and then go back on gluten have worse symptoms than they did before.   And it can take months to recover from a gluten challenge.

If your first test endoscopy was suggestive of celiac and your blood antibodies showed improvement when gluten-free, then there seems little doubt that you have celiac disease IMHO.

Johnny55400 Apprentice

Thanks for your advice. I am going to think over it. 

 

PrincessBella Newbie

One thing I have been learning is trust nothing unless you know what every ingredient that is in it. Some Packaged foods claiming to be gluten free can lawfully contain 0.03% of gluten. A small enough amount you would think, but learned this only after I feasted on some gluten free crackers (yay I thought).  Also although a food should be gluten free if it is not manufactured in a gluten free facility, a good example Quaker Oatmeal. They do have a gluten free but unless it specifically says on the package it is not...then read the ingredients. 

It has been almost a year and I just realized the peanuts I ate had maltodextrin in them which is wheat. It is hard because it is everywhere, peanuts are supposed to be a safe food but not the planters brand

Hope this helps and good luck!

Scott Adams Grand Master

Maltodextrin, in the USA anyway, is made from corn and is gluten-free. Also, in the USA and Europe the standard to be labeled GF is 20 ppm, which is much less than .03%. 

Mireille Newbie

There are some vitamin supplements that contain gluten - for example, what was once my favourite multi-vitamin (One-a-Day VitaCraves Gummies with Omega-3 and DHA). Fortunately, they state - right on the back label - "contains wheat."

I think the lesson is: always check the label on everything. It is really better to be safe than sorry.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      126,079
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Kassie S
    Newest Member
    Kassie S
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.9k
    • Total Posts
      69.2k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Wheatwacked
      Could be the Ozampic is masking your expected symptoms.  Like an analgesic masks pain.  Qzampic slows digestion to lower the rate glucose enters the intestine to slow its effect on glucose level.  It seems it might also slow down the gluten entry into the intestine, reducing its trigger level for the antibodies.  Ultimately the damage from gluten is the same, just not as fast so the pain is less.  Sourdough bread has less gluten.  Ozampic siows its entry.
    • Wheatwacked
      You can sell it better if the whole family does gluten free.  If he does have Celiac Diease, it is genetic so either you, your spouse, or both have a 40% chance of also having Celiac.  There are over 200 non classic symptoms also caused by celiac disease not often considered by doctors. Joint pain, muscle pain, muscle cramps, osteoporosis, and allergies for starters.  
    • Wheatwacked
      Hello @MHavoc, thank you for your question and welcome to the clinic. First, has the contstipation abated with the GFD? If your are pursuing further diagnostics you must continue to eat gluten. Each lab has their own reference range for their test, but they indicate an H for high.  Typically anything above 11 is considered positive. Mild chronic inflammation (gastritis) can interfere with intrinsic factor for B12 leading to low B12 causing low MCHC (anemia). So what is causing your gastritis?  A high tTG IgA level generally indicates potential gastrointestinal problems most commonly associated with celiac disease.  Although the biopsy is the Gold Standard for diagnosis, not finding damage in the biopsy does not rule out Celiac Disease. It means they did not find damage where they looked.  The small intestine is over 20 feet long. Many here have been blood positive and biopsy negative, it just delays the diagnosis until you have enough damage to find and fit their diagnostic profile. The Ttg-iga is not only sensitive (90%) but highly specific (98%) and won’t show positive until the damage is severe.  It is estimated that 40% of first degree relatives of diagnosed Celiacs have undiagnosed Celiac Disease, so your sister is a big risk factor in whether you have it. Are You Confused About Your Celiac Disease Lab Results?  This article explains it better and is quite readable. Celiac Disease can cause deficient vitamin D.  Low vitamin D compromises the immune system.  Any other symptoms? liver enzymes?  Recent cold or flue? Celiac Disease and the malabsorption it causes through vitamin and mineral deficiencies can elicit symptoms not usually associated with Celiac Disease. Case in point maybe your gastritis and anemia.  
    • MHavoc
      As with most of the people that come here, I have questions and need perspective/info from this wonderful community.  Some background, started having severe constipation that would not abate even with softners (not really fun to talk about), so I was able to finally get in to see my primary and she scheduled some blood work.  One of things she wanted to test for is Celiac Disease due to my sister having celiac disease since a young child. Here are my test results: MCHC = 31.4 so considered slightly low TISSUE TRANSGLUTAMINASE AB, IGA = 78.8 H So with that result, I was scheduled for an endoscope for confirmation of celiac disease, but I am very confused with the results: Diagnosis 1. Duodenum, biopsy: -No pathologic alteration. 2. Stomach, biopsy: -Mild chronic inflammation with reactive epithelial change -H. pylori not identified on immunostained section. -No intestinal metaplasia or dysplasia I am now scheduled to meet with a GI Specialist from the Celiac team, but that won't be until after the New Year.  I would appreciate thoughts about the biopsy report to understand whether it confirms the celiac disease as was indicated by the blood test results. I have been gluten free for two weeks and it is a very difficult adjustment for me as an older 50+ person.
    • Vozzyv
      Anyone else have intermittent left ear ringing and outer right ear pain? Both seem to happen in the evenings. 
×
×
  • Create New...