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Abbreviations


DelilahStark

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DelilahStark Newbie

I am new to this forum and have been browsing some of the topics. I am not a celiac but have a serious wheat and gluten intolerance, as does my father.

ANYWAYS, back on topic...some, well all, of the abbreviations confuse me. What is DD and DH??? I can't remember the others but they are super confusing.

Help!!!


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lynnelise Apprentice

On this site DH usually refers to dermatitis herpetiformis. Other sites it may be dear/darling husband. DD is daughter.

IrishHeart Veteran

Some that appear often are:

CC means cross contamination (the product did not contain wheat or gluten but may have been contaminated by them)

"D" means diarrhea

"C" means constipation... sorry, but you asked :lol:

IMHO = in my humble opinion

any others you aren't sure of??

DelilahStark Newbie

I understand some of them but I dont understand when people say "This was my favorite treat DD" Or "My DH loves them."

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    • trents
      You are welcome! We frequently get similar comments. Knowledge about celiac disease in the medical community at large is, unfortunately, still significantly lacking. Sometimes docs give what are obviously bum steers or just fail to give any steering at all and leave their patients just hanging out there on a limb. GI docs seem to have better knowledge but typically fail to be helpful when it comes to things like assisting their patients in grasping how to get started on gluten free eating. The other thing that, to me at least, seems to be coming to the forefront are the "tweener" cases where someone seems to be on the cusp of developing celiac disease but kind of crossing back and forth over that line. Their testing is inconsistent and inconclusive and their symptoms may come and go. We like to think in definite categorical terms but real life isn't always that way.
    • Rogol72
      Hey @Morgan Tiernan, Sounds just like my experience. I was diagnosed with dermatitis herpetiformis over 10 years ago. It appeared suddenly as a very itchy rash which looked like Eczema. When a steroid cream didn't clear it up, my Dermatologist (who had come across it before) suspected dermatitis herpetiformis and performed a skin biopsy which came back positive for dermatitis herpetiformis. The important thing is to get a definitive diagnosis of dermatitis herpetiformis. What you've described sounds like classic dermatitis herpetiformis though. Hopefully, your Dermatologist has come across dermatitis herpetiformis before and performs the skin biopsy correctly as trents mentioned. I've had the blisters on the knees, hips, forearms/elbows or anywhere that pressure is applied to the skin ... from clothing or otherwise. They itch like nothing on earth, and yes salt from sweat or soaps/shower gels will irritate a lot. I've been on Dapsone and it is very very effective at eliminating the dermatitis herpetiformis itch, and improved my quality of life in the early stages of getting on top of dermatitis herpetiformis while I adjusted to the gluten-free diet. But it does have various side effects as trents said. It can effect the red blood cells, lowering hemoglobin and can cause anemia, and requires regular blood monitoring whilst on it. You would need to consider it carefully with your Dermatologist if you do have dermatitis herpetiformis. Here's a very informative webinar from Coeliac Canada discussing everything dermatitis herpetiformis related.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PAdmsNiyfOw I've also found this recent interview with a Dermatologist about dermatitis herpetiformis to be educational.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZnLeKutgUY Keep the chin up and keep advocating for yourself for a proper diagnosis. Though it sounds like you're on top of that already. Are you in the UK or Ireland? I'm curious because your surname is Irish. 
    • Philly224
      Thanks again everyone! Twenty mins on here way more helpful than both Dr's combined 😅
    • trents
    • trents
      I would go for four weeks to ensure a valid test, if you can tolerate it, that is.
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