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Food Intolerance Testing


byebyegluten

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byebyegluten Newbie

i went gluten free over a year ago, and am fairly certain that i have celiac. my mother also has a wheat intolerance. i of course cut out everything from my diet and THEN tried to have the blood test done, which was negative because i had stopped eating it a while before that. there is no way that i can go back on gluten to have the testing done- i get so sick i can't move.

i've also been 'lactose intolerant' since i was a child, but i think that is also a casein intolerance, not just lactose. since eliminating gluten, i have found out that i'm also intolerant to soy. however, i still feel like other things are bothering me, and i'm suspecting rice and corn and possibly something else.

anyways, i'm interested in getting intolerance testing done as well as the celiac genetic testing. i know people have mentioned enterolabs. is there anywhere else i can get testing (in the U.S.) that will test for multiple intolerances? i have had the food allergy blood panel done (i think it was igG) and those were all negative. any help would be appreciated!

  • 4 weeks later...

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wschmucks Contributor

I had a test that was given to me through my natropathic Dr. I want to have another one done and am no longer seeing that Dr. I have an appointment with my GI tomorrow and am going to request another test.

The original test I had done was with a company called Immuno Labratories. I had the IgG Standard Food Sensetivity Assay. They test for next to everything. If you cant have your Dr run a similar test (dont know if there are any??) you can go to www.immunolabs.com or call them at (945)-691-2500 and see what type of Drs could administer the test. Good luck!

Mother of Jibril Enthusiast

Sometimes people find IgG testing useful... mostly in cases where you suspect multiple foods and don't know where to start first. The problem is that the results can depend on what foods you're eating and the state of your intestines. For example, you could have a severe intolerance to wheat, but if you've already cut it out of your diet you probably won't get a positive result.

Unlike allergies, an elimination diet is the best way to determine if you have a food intolerance.

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    • trents
      Take it easy! I was just prompting you for some clarification.  In the distillation process, the liquid is boiled and the vapor descends up a tube and condenses into another container as it cools. What people are saying is that the gluten molecules are too large and heavy to travel up with the vapor and so get left behind in the original liquid solution. Therefore, the condensate should be free of gluten, no matter if there was gluten in the original solution. The explanation contained in the second sentence I quoted from your post would not seem to square with the physics of the distillation process. Unless, that is, I misunderstood what you were trying to explain.
    • Mynx
      No they do not contradict each other. Just like frying oil can be cross contaminated even though the oil doesn't contain the luten protein. The same is the same for a distilled vinegar or spirit which originally came from a gluten source. Just because you don't understand, doesn't mean you can tell me that my sentences contradict each other. Do you have a PhD in biochemistry or friends that do and access to a lab?  If not, saying you don't understand is one thing anything else can be dangerous to others. 
    • Mynx
      The reason that it triggers your dermatitis herpetiformis but not your celiac disease is because you aren't completely intolerant to gluten. The celiac and dermatitis herpetiformis genes are both on the same chronometer. Dermatitis herpetoformus reacts to gluten even if there's a small amount of cross contamination while celiac gene may be able to tolerate a some gluten or cross contamination. It just depends on the sensitivity of the gene. 
    • trents
      @Mynx, you say, "The reason this is believed is because the gluten protein molecule is too big to pass through the distillation process. Unfortunately, the liquid ie vinegar is cross contaminated because the gluten protein had been in the liquid prior to distillation process." I guess I misunderstand what you are trying to say but the statements in those two sentences seem to contradict one another.
    • Mynx
      It isn't a conjecture. I have gotten glitened from having some distilled white vinegar as a test. When I talked to some of my scientists friends, they confirmed that for a mall percentage of people, distilled white vinegar is a problem. The cross contamination isn't from wheat glue in a cask. While yhe gluten protein is too large to pass through the distillation process, after the distillation process, the vinegar is still cross contaminated. Please don't dismiss or disregard the small group of people who are 100^ gluten intolerant by saying things are conjecture. Just because you haven't done thr research or aren't as sensitive to gluten doesn't mean that everyone is like you. 
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