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

I Think I Have Celiac Disease


Cortneysmibro

Recommended Posts

Cortneysmibro Rookie

Ok this post may be a bit long. I am pretty sure I have celiac Disease. I have been online researching for YEARS what might be wrong with me. I have though everything from narcolepsy to cancer. It all started about 4 years ago while I was pregnant with my third baby. But I just figured then that it was all just symptoms of pregnancy. The tiredness after eating, my heart would race and pound out of my chest. Constant headaches. My hands and feet would feel like they where asleep for no reason at all. I was constantly foggy headed and some times dizzy. But after the baby was born a few months went by and I was still not feeling better. Then I started having issues with my gallbladder. My mom who is diabetic told me to check my blood sugar. It was fine, yet I still got SOOO tired after eating. Over the next few years it got worse and worse. I had forgotten about the connection between eating and the tired spells since it was about 20 mins to an hour after I would eat that they would come on. Some times it was so bad that I could not keep myself awake no matter how hard I tried. And coffee only seemed to make it worse. I tried vitamins, getting more sleep, you name it. The only thing that seemed to help was when I tried a low carb diet to lose some weight. I am horribly over weight, and no matter what I seem to do I just can't seem to lose it. But I started feeling less tired and foggy and more like myself. My complexion cleared up and my skin seemed less read and blotchy. I got less headaches and woke up feeling refreshed in the mornings. But I started adding other low carb bread products and high fiber things back into my diet and slowly I started feeling crappy again. So after years and years of just going down hill and feeling worse and worse I finally went to the doctor. She tested me for some things and sent me to a therapist. They therapist says I am fine and thought I had a hormone problem. the doctor says no. I have reactive mono..... well the symptoms are getting much much worse.My joints are starting to hurt all the time. Most days I have HORRIBLE diarrhea. I get so foggy headed I can't keep a train of thought. My hand and feet are always cold and tingling. I am so so so tired all the time. No one believes that I feel bad. To everyone, including my husband I look fine. I keep telling him that there is SOMETHING wrong with me. That I just don't feel good ever. He thinks I am lazy,I eat to much and I am crazy :( But I'm not lazy. I am just exhausted. I want to try cutting out gluten and see if I feel better but I have a feeling it will be expensive and since my husband does not think I have a problem he will not want me wasting money on special food. I guess I could just stick to meat and veggies and fruit. I was just wondering if this sounds at all like that's what I may have? I have done SOOOO much research and this is the closest to how I feel. "sigh" I wish I could go to more doctors until someone listened to me. But I have no insurance. so I am stuck with the only doctor I can afford around here.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



kareng Grand Master

Did they check your thyroid? Are you anemic? Both things that make you feel tired & gain weight.

GottaSki Mentor

Hello and Welcome!

I don't have a great deal of time to post right now, but try not to lose heart when docs tell it is either stress, hormonal or depression. Trust your gut.

If you can have a celiac blood panel run before you give up gluten.

Your symptoms are very similar to mine and it took doctors along with me researching everything under the sun to find Celiac at 42 years of age...I was going to them with similar symptoms since my early 20s.

Hang in there...and trust your gut!

Cortneysmibro Rookie

Did they check your thyroid? Are you anemic? Both things that make you feel tired & gain weight.

thyroid is fine. That was one of the first things the doc checked out. I am anemic, but I have been since 2002. But that only explains the tired part. That does not answer everything else. :(

mushroom Proficient

You have not mentioned yet if your doctor has run a celiac panel for you. This is the first step in determining whether it is celiac disease. The celiac panel consists of the following tests:

Anti-Gliadin (AGA) IgA

Anti-Gliadin (AGA) IgG

Anti-Endomysial (EMA) IgA

Anti-Tissue Transglutaminase (tTG) IgA

Deamidated Gliadin Peptide (DGP) IgA and IgG

Total Serum IgA

If these tests have not yet been run you should ask your doctor to do them for you. If they have, can you post your results with the ranges the lab uses (if you do not have a copy of the results, you should get them - this should be done routinely for all lab testing). :)

Lori2 Contributor

Having a doctor run a celiac panel first would be preferable. However, with no insurance and an unsympathetic husband, going on the gluten-free diet is probably your only option. With your symptoms, I would certainly give it a try.

Gluten free products are expensive and are unnecessary. I personally can afford them, but do better without them. I stick to meats, vegetables, some fruit and then add rice, rice cakes, yogurt (I

Ninja Contributor

I've found the gluten-free products to be more of a nuisance than a help. Of course, it is nice to know they are there. Since, in science, there is claimed to be no such thing as true "zero" (in this area, anyhow), they allow a very small amount of gluten to remain in the product (<20pp). However, the more of that gluten-free food you eat, the more gluten gets into your system. This happened to me and it took awhile to figure it out. Luckily someone on here had posted about it!

Stick to the naturally gluten free whole foods; they're better on our bodies. :)

Good luck and don't be discouraged by the doctors. They say they've gone to medical school, but most seem to have just slept through it (lol). Either that or they need a "creative/outside the box thinking" degree in there as well.

~Laura


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Skylark Collaborator

You could definitely be celiac. It's common to have it come on in pregnancy. If you can get tested, you want to do that before you go off gluten. You have to be on a full gluten diet to get accurate results. If you feel better off gluten you're not going to want to eat the stuff for three months to be tested down the road. If testing is simply not an option go ahead and try the diet.

It's really easy to eat gluten-free on a budget. You just have to avoid the temptation to get the overpriced specialty breads and cookies. Rice, corn, and potatoes will be your starches instead. You can make totally "normal" dinners. Roast a chicken with some potatoes and serve with a salad (gluten-free dressing) and veggies. Your family probably won't even notice that it's gluten-free. Cook a couple extra potatoes and you can make eggs and home fries for breakfast the next morning. :)

A lot of family favorites like pot roast, beans and franks (I have yet to see gluten in a hot dog and Bush's has some gluten-free baked beans), homemade chili, stir-fry (use La Choy soy sauce or San J gluten-free tamari sauce), and chicken soup with rice are easy to make gluten-free. A big pot of vegetarian bean soup is only a few dollars to make and it makes a great meal served with homemade cornbread.

Here's my cornbread recipe.

Gemini Experienced

thyroid is fine. That was one of the first things the doc checked out. I am anemic, but I have been since 2002. But that only explains the tired part. That does not answer everything else. :(

The anemia that you have had since 2002 explains a lot more than just being tired. :o You know, I was anemic my entire adult life, from 18 to 46, when I hit the wall with Celiac and almost died. Yup....many a doctor blew me off and told me I was anemic due to heavy periods. The problem with that explanation is I never had a heavy period in my life, until I went through menopause.

I can understand your anger and frustration, believe me, so get back to a doctor and have them run the tests posted and make sure you gluten up for the testing. After they finish with that, go gluten-free immediately and give it a good 6 months because it takes that long for things to begin to get straightened out.

Your thyroid may not be alright either...they tend to screw that up too. It would be helpful if you had the results to post because it's common to have thyroid issues with Celiac also.

You don't need a doctors permission to eat whatever you want so if you choose a dietary trial, then go for it and don't look back. Dietary trials can be more revealing than many tests they do.

Cortneysmibro Rookie

Well I went ahead and just cut out gluten to see how I felt. I felt better almost immediately! What I thought was IBS, is GONE!!! No more headaches. I am not falling asleep or getting racing heart beats after eating! I am still very very tired and thirsty. My hands and feet are not tingling as much. I am still a bit fuzzy headed but I do not seem to feel as dizzy, or like the room is rocking when I turn my head. I did however discover that I must not be able to have soy either. I took a multi-vitamin this morning. With in 15 mins of taking it I was sicker then I had ever been from anything I have eaten. I started throwing up, got a horrible migraine, was so dizzy and fuzzy feeling. My body just tried to get everything out of it as fast as possible and in any way possible. :( It was horrible.It's been like 7 hours and I still do not feel 100% normal yet. SO I just learned that just because it says gluten free on the label does NOT mean that it will not make me sick. But other then that with or with out a diagnosis I think I will just stick to gluten free. I have not felt this good in years. I can only imagine how much better I will be a few more months down the road. I would love to go get tested but I honestly can't afford another doctor visit or more tests. I am already in dept to them for just shy of $1000.00 I can't keep adding more to it. I hate not having insurance. It stinks.

tom Contributor

Well I went ahead and just cut out gluten to see how I felt. I felt better almost immediately! What I thought was IBS, is GONE!!! No more headaches.

. .. .. ..

Awesome.

... I hate not having insurance. It stinks.

Reminds me to wonder how long the US will continue to be the only industrialized country that seemingly has no problem with putting ppl into your position.

It stinks.

Remember to vote this November, everyone. (Ok not *every*one)

tom Contributor

Forgot to comment on the multi-vit - some seem to have so many ingred it's tough to be sure which is a problem. Also, I've had them act differently depending on how much I ate w them.

That said, soy is pretty common in aggravating ppl w celiac.

Hope those other issues are improving.

Let us know. :)

Skylark Collaborator

That's great news that you feel so much better. B) I'd suggest you keep a food and symptom diary. That way if you react to something with a lot of ingredients or have delayed reactions you'll start to figure out a pattern.

adab8ca Enthusiast

Listen to your body. SO many of us were told "it's stress". I knew it wasn't freaking stress and that something was terribly wrong,so do you! I am SO happy that your gluten-free experience seems to be leading you in the right direction.

Many many healing hugs

AVR1962 Collaborator

Another thing that is not uncommon while pg is gestational diabetes. I had it with my 3rd child, made me quite sick. My iron levels were too low and my bllood sugar too high, not a good combo. Iron supplements and taking carbs out of my diet helped alot.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      128,376
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Joanne Walko
    Newest Member
    Joanne Walko
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.1k
    • Total Posts
      70.8k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Connie, spinach is high in oxalates. Many celiacs do not tolerate oxalates well.  If you are still battling dermatitis herpetiformis, you may want to look into a low iodine diet as well as reviewing possible sources of gluten cross contamination.
    • Scott Adams
      Do you eat outside your home, especially in restaurants, as this can be a source of cross-contamination. If you need to take dapsone still your diet may not be 100% gluten-free. This article has some detailed information on how to be 100% gluten-free, so it may be helpful (be sure to also read the comments section.):    
    • Connie Smitj
      I was diagnosed 5 years ago. I also have celiac rash which is no longer an issue thanks to maintenance dose of dapsone.  I ate spinach with lemon juice  and had terrible pain after. My mother whom I suspect had undiagnosed celiac disease developed a duodenal ulcer that turned into a sarcoma late in life . My celiac clinic suggests seeing my family doctor.
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @Tyoung! Apparently, folic acid in supplements is readily absorbed into the bloodstream as opposed to getting folate from natural food sources. So, high levels in the blood can happen quickly from supplementation: Your body doesn’t absorb folate as easily as it absorbs folic acid. It’s estimated that about 85% of folic acid from fortified foods or supplements is absorbed, while only 50% of natural folate from foods is used by your body. After folic acid is absorbed into your bloodstream, it’s broken down into smaller compounds by your liver. However, the liver is only able to process a certain amount of folic acid at a time. As a result, consuming too much folic acid from fortified foods and supplements can cause unmetabolized folic acid (UMFA) to accumulate in your blood. This doesn’t happen when you eat high folate foods. From: https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/folic-acid-side-effects#How-excess-folic-acid-develops I would think your folate levels will normalize over time. But I'm curious. Were you tested for vitamin/mineral deficiencies before being given supplements or was it just assumed you would have them after finding out you have celiac disease? Your acid reflux issues could certainly be a holdover from the week of supplementation now discontinued. Another possibility is "gluten withdrawal" which some experience in the first few weeks after going gluten free. Gluten has addictive qualities similar to opiates. Another possibility is certain polysaccharides commonly found in gluten free prepackaged facsimile foods. They use these polysaccharides (e.g., xanthan gum) as texturing agents to approximate what gluten does in wheat products and they are hard to digest. Let me caution you against long term proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy for the acid reflux. That simply raises gut PH (lowers acidity) which interferes with the absorption of vitamins and minerals from our diets. Way too often, docs will prescribe PPIs as a band aid for reflux and leave their patients on them forever. It's much better to use over the counter calcium-based remedies like TUMS to give you coverage as needed rather than treat reflux systemically with acid blockers.
    • Tyoung
      I was diagnosed in November with celiacs and at the time had been tested for multiple vitamin deficiencies. During that time my folate level was 4ng/mL, Although I was told to take supplements, I ended up only taking them for a week or so as they made my stomach upset. I had my blood work redone yesterday and as the results came in I noticed that most of my levels are now normal, but folate level is >24ng/mL. Has anyone else had similar results? If so were you able to figure out why or how to normalize them? I also have been having constant acid reflux since about two weeks into going gluten free (no acid reflux history prior to) that we are trying to get to the bottom of with no answers. Could that be related? Thank you!! Also wanted to not that I am not eating any gluten free processed food.
×
×
  • Create New...