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Recent Activity
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- Liquid lunch posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease0
Medicinal mushrooms 🍄
I can’t say this will work for everyone but for me the difference is incredible so might be worth trying. I’ve never been diagnosed celiac but via an elimination diet I realised I can’t eat any lectins, gluten soy and oats are particularly problematic. If I eat them I’m in bed for a week, then heavy bleeding and extreme pain for another, followed by a th... -
- Scott Adams replied to Soleihey's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease1
Endoscopy
Given your history of a high TTG (167) that decreased to 16 on a gluten-free diet, along with genetic confirmation of celiac disease, it’s likely the negative biopsy is a false negative due to not eating gluten before the endoscopy. Gluten is necessary to trigger the intestinal damage seen in celiac disease, and avoiding it can lead to healing and a normal b... -
- Scott Adams replied to Matt13's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease1
Biopsy results after 1,5 gfd
Yes, it sounds like great progress, but what was the time frame between the two endoscopies? -
- Scott Adams replied to mariamccl's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease1
Help with results
Your symptoms—headaches, dizziness, nausea, irregular bowel movements, anemia, and menstrual changes—along with a family history of celiac disease, strongly suggest celiac disease could be the cause. The mild duodenal changes seen in your biopsy are consistent with early or mild celiac disease, though they could also be due to other factors. The improvement in ... -
- Scott Adams replied to Ryangf's topic in Related Issues & Disorders2
For people with celiac disease and corn intolerance from it: Is salt still okay for most people?
For people with celiac disease and corn intolerance, most salts, including table salt with dextrose, are generally safe in small amounts, as the dextrose is typically highly processed and unlikely to contain problematic corn proteins. However, if you’re highly sensitive, you might consider switching to pure kosher or Himalayan salt, which don’t contain add...
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