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

Enterolab


artlili

Recommended Posts

artlili Newbie

My son is 4 and he was just tested for gluten intolerance. IgA came back with normal levels and TtG was negative. Also did sucrose test Friday but it will most likely be negative because it reproduced none of his symptoms (ruling out sucrose intolerance). One uncle of mine is on gluten-free diet with complete remission of all symptoms but all his test including biopsy were negative. I am considering testing with Enterolab before rejecting the celiac disease diagnosis. However there is no literature on the sensitivity or specificity of their test that I am aware of. I found no research at all on their stool testing procedure. Any information on the validity of the Enterolab procedure?

Lactaid milk and enzimes with dairy products has reduced my son's complaints of lower abdominal pain and it as reduced the frequency of his diarrhea episodes down to maybe 1/week. He gained 4 pounds in just a few weeks when we started the enzimes. However he still has tummy pain almost daily when he eats a variety of non-dairy food like some brand of hot-dog or chicken nuggets. He eats pastas and bread and cutting it just to try gluten-free diet would mean he would initially loose weight before adapting to new food and he has NO weight to loose just for fun. I am trying to have a diagnosis before implementing any change in his diet. His case seams pretty mild that's maybe why the TtG is negative or maybe his problem has nothing to do with celiac disease. He does not react specifically to wheat product. It may just be lactose intolerance but the GI specialist doubts it. I have not talk to the doc about Enterolab yet but I know what she will say...

It feels good to talk about it. So, what about Enterolab any good reference?

Liliane


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Nevadan Contributor

I'm an adult male who recently discovered I have a sensitivity to glutein by doing my own gluten elimination test (after many doctors over the last 25 yrs failed to ever mention glutin sensitivity). I did 3 subsequent brief gluten challenges to convince myself. Being gluten free after my experiments, I didn't want another gluten challenge to prepare for a conventional blood test, so I opted for Enterolab. I shipped my samples two weeks ago so hope to see results within about a week. I too am concerned about their lack of peer review or independent means of verification, but after some web research I decided to go with them anyway. My main interest is in their malabsorption test and using it to establish a baseline so that after a few months I can retest to see if the gluten-free diet is helping.

Re your child and the love of pasta, as long as you are eating at home I've found "Mrs Leeper's" corn spaghetti (glutin and casein free) to be about as good as any wheat pasta I've eaten. I get this at our local Raley's supermarket. It's probably available at other stores or on the web. You might want to give it a try.

Good luck.

gf4life Enthusiast

I personally was gluten free before my children. I spent a few years trying to get the proper testing for myself through conventional means, but ended up going on and off the diet for testing (which at that point I did not know it would mess up my results). After testing negative for everything, but knowing that I felt better on the gluten-free diet, I had the testing done with Enterolab. I was able to get blood tests done on my kids when my results came back positive. They all came back inconclusive (positive for IGG antibodies only) but were referred to a pediatric GI. When the insurance refused to do the labs again with a more reliable lab I opted for Enterolab for them also. I had researched them for over a year and felt they were reliable. The pedi GI said he could not give them a diagnosis based on the tests, as he had no experience with Enterolabs, but he was willing to support me in putting them on the diet. They all had such a positive response to the diet that he is very happy for me to keep them on it. He is monitoring their progress.

The thing is that you have to make the decision for yourself. If you need an absolute concrete diagnosis from a doctor then Enterolab is not for you. If you need to know for yourself and don't care that some people/doctors still think Enterolab is bogus, then conscider using them. (by the way Dr. Fine is currently collecting data on his tests and the people who have used them in preparation to present all the "evidence" of the validity of his test methods and they are also doing research on the stool tests over in Europe) I was more concerned with myself. I know myself enough to know that I would never stick to the diet without positive results. I knew already that I had an intolerance to gluten, but I needed to prove it to myself. I also was not going to condemn my children to a diet that they might not need without proof. For us it was also a money issue. If the insurance wasn't going to pay and it was coming out of pocket, then Enterolab was cheaper than Promethius and I would get more complete testing (ie: antibodies for TTG and Endomysial, malabsorbtion, gene testing for primary Celiac and secondary gluten intolerance genes and also a milk sensitivity test) for about $450. Prometheus was going to be over $700 for the blood and gene test and they only run the gene test for the two primary Celiac genes DQ2 & DQ8. My sons have the secondary gluten intolerance genes and would have tested negative on the gene test with them. So for that I am glad that I went with Enterolab. They would still be on gluten and have digestive problems and growth problems, as well as all the other issues that go along with gluten...they are doing so well and have such bad reactions to accidental gluten ngestion that I do not question the results of their tests.

I wish you the best in your decision about testing. Just do what feels right for you.

God bless,

Mariann

pixiegirl Enthusiast

I did the full EntroLab testing but after I went gluten free and for me it was just to look at my genes, mostly. I have 2 main genes for celiac, so I know my daughter has at least one....

I did the doctor route too and my Dr. tested me for celiac (one single blood test and I'm not sure which one...) and he said, "no celiac you can eat gluten."

Well he was wrong... I went gluten free and all my symptoms cleared up. Every time I accidently ingest gluten I get sick right away and it lasts for ages... so thats really all the proof I need, I don't care if its gluten sensitivity, celiac, wheat allergy, all I know is that gluten makes me sick and I'm not eating it! The EntroLab tests just confirmed it for me but I already knew it!

Best to you,

Susan

Guest barbara3675

Let me confirm what the former people have said. My granddaughter, who is seven, has had celiac disease for six years now and her mom suggested that I get tested a year ago. The one blood test that the doctor chose to do came back negative but I chose to go gluten-free anyway and did the full panel Enterolab which came back positive and I do carry the gene. I no longer have tummy pains (in the process they said I should avoid milk products too), bloating, gas...you know the routine. I can now tolerate all processed milk products like cheese, yogart etc. I still use rice milk on my cereal and eat soy ice cream, though. You really need to do what you heart is telling you is the smartest thing to do. Eating gluten-free isn't as bad as you think it is and to keep yourself healthy for life should be the chosen option.

Stick with the grand people of this message board, most of them are so wise, kind and want to help you.

Barbara

artlili Newbie

Thanks to all of you for the comments. I read some more today and found a slide show on Enterolab.com (Open Original Shared Link). It presents some unpublished data and literature review. Very enlightening. I will talk with The GI doctor this week and ask her what she thinks of Enterolab. In any case I am pretty sure I will do it for my son and also for my 8 months old daughter. I just need to convince my husband who is a good gait keeper for our finances.

Liliane :)

celiac3270 Collaborator
Thanks to all of you for the comments. I read some more today and found a slide show on Enterolab.com (Open Original Shared Link). It presents some unpublished data and literature review. Very enlightening. I will talk with The GI doctor this week and ask her what she thinks of Enterolab. In any case I am pretty sure I will do it for my son and also for my 8 months old daughter. I just need to convince my husband who is a good gait keeper for our finances.

Liliane :)

I'll warn you now. It is vary rare that you will find a GI doctor, or any doctor for that matter, who will approve of Enterolab. It's a slightly...unorthodox, unproven method of testing, besides which, the doctors want you to test at THEIR hospitals.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



steve-o Apprentice

Liliane,

I've been considering enterolab, and have the same concerns you do about the validity of their tests. My blood test was somewhat inconclusive, and my biopsy was negative (but they only took 1 tissue sample), so I'm hoping enterolab can give me a definitive answer as to what’s ailing me.

I'm really underweight, so I'm primarily interested in their test for intestinal malabsorption. I did some googling, and found this abstract about one of Dr Fine's research studies. It basically says that his malabsorption test is just as accurate as the dreaded "72 hour stool collection" test:

Open Original Shared Link

Also, if you read Dr Fine's curriculum vitae...at the bottom, it lists all the journals he's been published in. You can search the web for more specifics on what these studies found:

Open Original Shared Link

Another concern I had, was whether or not everybody comes back with some type of positive test....otherwise saying, is he just telling people the result they're expecting to hear? But there have actually been several posts in this forum asking that very question, and it turns out that lots of people have results that are negative.

So it seems like enterolab is a legitimate operation.

Hope this helps,

Steve

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - trents replied to Di Wallace's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      1

      Mucus discharge

    2. - trents replied to ARSTONE's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      4

      Feel Good gluten free chicken soup dumplings

    3. - knitty kitty replied to Leslie Clark's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      10

      Hidden Gluten in distilled vinegar

    4. - Di Wallace posted a topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      1

      Mucus discharge

    5. - ARSTONE replied to ARSTONE's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      4

      Feel Good gluten free chicken soup dumplings


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      127,823
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    AliceandEm
    Newest Member
    AliceandEm
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121k
    • Total Posts
      70.4k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      We usually see mucus in the stool in those with undiagnosed celiac disease and those not adhering to a gluten free diet. However, the mucus could also be coming from lower down in the intestinal track. I would seek a physician consult. You might also check into getting a follow-p endoscopy/biopsy on the small bowel to check for healing progress since going gluten free.
    • trents
      @ARSTONE, not to be picky because there has been evolution in the terminology with regard to gluten disorders. And the terms "gluten intolerance" and "gluten sensitivity" are still used by some interchangeably. But with time, "gluten intolerance" has become synonymous with celiac disease with "gluten sensitivity" referring to NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity). Having said that, whatever it may be, apparently there is an ingredient in that product that doesn't agree with you.
    • knitty kitty
      @Manaan2, You may want to consider switching from Miralax (polyethylene glycol) to magnesium citrate and Thiamine supplements.   When I was prescribed Miralax for constipation, I developed worsened gastrointestinal problems, including worsening leaky gut syndrome.  Since polyethylene glycol is a synthetic chemical made from petroleum or coal byproducts, I was uncomfortable with that.   Miralax can cause poor vitamin absorption, flushing vitamins and minerals away before they can be absorbed.  Miralax can cause electrolyte imbalances, meaning low magnesium.  Low magnesium levels can cause constipation.  Low Thiamine Vitamin B1 can cause constipation as well.  Magnesium and Thiamine work together to make life sustaining enzymes.  Without sufficient thiamine and magnesium, the gastrointestinal tract slows down resulting in constipation, a sort of catch twenty-two.   I quit taking Miralax.  I took a form of Thiamine, Benfotiamine 250-300 mg, at the beginning of every meal and 200mg magnesium citrate or magnesium glycinate or magnesium l-threonate (Neuromag) at the end of every meal.  My constipation resolved quickly.  When my stool got too loose, I simply reduced the amount of magnesium.  I did not reduce Benfotiamine which has been shown to promote intestinal health and reduce leaky gut syndrome.  If thiamine at night gives too much energy to fall asleep at night, skip the Benfotiamine at the last evening meal. Blood tests ate not accurate measures of vitamin sufficiency.  The best way to check for Thiamine insufficiency is to take it and look for health improvement within a few days.  Thiamine is water soluble, easily excreted in urine if not needed.  Thiamine is safe and nontoxic when used in high doses.  No harm in trying, just to rule this out.   Best wishes.  Do keep us posted on your daughter's progress!
    • Di Wallace
      I don't know if anyone can help. I was diagnosed with celiac last June. Since going gluten free the diarrhea has stopped, in fact things have gone the other way. What is bothering me is the occasional rectal mucus discharge. I have no other symptoms and it doesn't happen very often. As I haven't seen anyone since my diagnosis, I don't know if this is normal or not
    • ARSTONE
      The issue is I'm not actually celiac but gluten intolerant. So do t know why I am so sick from this. It's been two days. 
×
×
  • Create New...