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

My Brother Has Ataxia!


gatita

Recommended Posts

gatita Enthusiast

I am still in shock, but my older brother was just diagnosed with ataxia today.

He started having severe balance problems and dizziness around 3 weeks ago and spent yesterday in the ER. After a CT scan and blood test for who knows what, they're saying it's ataxia and referring him to a neurologist.

I am truly hoping it is gluten ataxia because at least that has a treatment. The alternative causes could be tumors, a stroke, MS or....? I mentioned gluten to him today and he said they never said anything about it to him, so I sent him the latest studies, including one saying everyone with unexplained ataxia should be tested for gluten sensitivity.

I am still reeling from this, the effect on my poor brother is devastating -- he can't walk straight, his vision is blurred and he has been vomiting non-stop. This morning he tried to take a walk and he fell. :( And they still may not get him in to see a neurologist by tomorrow!

It also all kind of blows me away because my GI this week said I do not have the celiac genes... but it sure seems like something is running in the family.

I am just hoping my bro will go gluten-free right away. I don't even know if he is supposed to stay on gluten for any testing, but given the seriousness of ataxia and how quickly his seems to be worsening, it seems to me he should go gluten-free immediately no matter what.

Does anyone have any thoughts or experience with this? I'm just scared for him... :(


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



mushroom Proficient

That is very scary and frightening for you. I am so sorry he is going through this. I will certainly keep my fingers crossed for gluten ataxia, that's for sure. I think if I were he I would quit the gluten right now, to heck with any testing. It will be or it won't be when it comes to testing, but his health is what is important right now. I agree with you, immediately. If it is gluten he is extremely sensitive. Are they planning on doing an MRI? Normally if it is gluten it will show UBO's (Unidentified Bright Objects) on an MRI. ravenwoodglass is the one who has had this the worst, I believe. Maybe you could pm her - she hasn't been on much lately with her new job. ravenwood's genes were neither DQ2 nor DQ8.

I will keep you both in thoughts and prayers.

frieze Community Regular

That is very scary and frightening for you. I am so sorry he is going through this. I will certainly keep my fingers crossed for gluten ataxia, that's for sure. I think if I were he I would quit the gluten right now, to heck with any testing. It will be or it won't be when it comes to testing, but his health is what is important right now. I agree with you, immediately. If it is gluten he is extremely sensitive. Are they planning on doing an MRI? Normally if it is gluten it will show UBO's (Unidentified Bright Objects) on an MRI. ravenwoodglass is the one who has had this the worst, I believe. Maybe you could pm her - she hasn't been on much lately with her new job. ravenwood's genes were neither DQ2 nor DQ8.

I will keep you both in thoughts and prayers.

find out what genes you have, I think DQ1 is the more common with neuro issues...Raven is Dq9 and i can't remember the other...as far as your brother goes, i would wonder about Meniere's. Have they started him on prednisone?

ravenwoodglass Mentor

Sorry to hear your brother is having such severe issues. There can be many causes of ataxia that are easily treated so try not to worry too much about this. It might be a good idea for your brother to also see an ear, nose and throat specialist considering how quickly this came on and the severity of it's presentation. While it could be gluten ataxia I don't think that usually has such a sudden occurance. Whatever is causing this I hope it clears up for him quickly. IMHO he is best off calling his GP or Internist and requesting a lab slip for a comple celiac panel before he goes gluten free. If you are diagnosed there should be no problem with the doctor ordering the test since it is advised that any 1st degree relatives be tested once one family member is diagnosed.

gatita Enthusiast

Thank you all so much for the quick replies! My genes are DQ6.3 and DQ9, and I have read two studies linking DQ9 to celiac.

He has a neurology appointment and MRIs scheduled right away, so that should tell us more. He hasn't been prescribed anything yet, but I'm fairly sure (not positive) they ruled out Meniere's... I will ask him.

Raven, that is reassuring that there are other treatable causes too. I will remind him to request the celiac panel right away as you say since the doctors still suspect it in me. (I am not officially diagnosed with anything more that wheat allergy at this point, have an endo next week).

He is a starving musician and hasn't been to a doctor in years -- my nieces had to forcefully drag him to the ER!

Oh also, he did have a strange, year-long episode of Bell's Palsy a few years ago, I wonder if it's related.

Takala Enthusiast

I'm glad he seems to have better insurance than I had at the time these symptoms really took off with me - trying to get taken seriously, and tested by specialists at the most common, big name HMO in the state of CA (the one with the catchy jingles on the radio ) was a complete nightmare. Even the Neurologist from Hell™ that I was stuck with in the next round of insurance strung me along for nearly a near before doing scans of brain and c- spine, then balked on admitting there was damage consistent with celiac/gluten intolerance, and told me I had nothing wrong with me that would cause any symptoms of ataxia- implying I was faking it. As if anyone would go to that amount of trouble to magically make the images show spinal stenosis,blown discs, and holes in my brain- they must be a sort of super- duper Cat scan hacker. :angry: And it was so brilliant I how I made my one eye lose ability to see the full range of color vision and cross all the time. <_<

I keep repeating this story so other people with the gluten- caused neurological damage causing ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, and vision loss don't give up and get blown off if they test negative for celiac by the classic blood test, or if get scoffed at if they are not thin and obviously wasting away from gut troubles. THIS IS A CONDITION WHICH CAN BE CONTROLLED and healing CAN take place with diet adherence.

I haven't done the genetic test and I won't, until we finally have something resembling universal health care coverage in this country. I don't want to give the idiots more fodder to tell me I don't have a "gluten problem," if it turned out I wasn't the carrier of the usual ones, and it's irrelevant anyway, as I am strict about diet adherence and don't need the motivation. I already have the motivation because if I slip up, I get symptoms that render my life dysfunctional, and I don't mean a bit of upset tummy.

Have your brother have the full celiac panel done, a.s.a.p. as others have said, but have them look at the brain if he can get a scan looking for damage for MS or whatnot. The "bright spots" of gluten damage brain lesions will look different. Insist he tell the neuro about his first degree relative with gluten intolerance. Do a google search of "Hadjivassiliou gluten ataxia" and print out some of the Pub Med research for the doctor. If and when the testing is done, and there is no resolution or explanation, or, better yet, there is one, then he can try a strict gluten free diet. MAKE SURE if he is given ANY MEDICATION for anything it is GLUTEN FREE. I have also had some big time weirdo reactions to common medications (acid blockers and large doses of ibuprofen taken together... holy moley :blink: ) that made the ataxia a lot worse. It was my old optician that clued me in that I should look at that stuff to see if not taking it made a difference. Sometimes you get the good advice from the unlikely sources.

gatita Enthusiast

I'm glad he seems to have better insurance than I had at the time these symptoms really took off with me - trying to get taken seriously, and tested by specialists at the most common, big name HMO in the state of CA (the one with the catchy jingles on the radio ) was a complete nightmare. Even the Neurologist from Hell™ that I was stuck with in the next round of insurance strung me along for nearly a near before doing scans of brain and c- spine, then balked on admitting there was damage consistent with celiac/gluten intolerance, and told me I had nothing wrong with me that would cause any symptoms of ataxia- implying I was faking it. As if anyone would go to that amount of trouble to magically make the images show spinal stenosis,blown discs, and holes in my brain- they must be a sort of super- duper Cat scan hacker. :angry: And it was so brilliant I how I made my one eye lose ability to see the full range of color vision and cross all the time. <_<

I keep repeating this story so other people with the gluten- caused neurological damage causing ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, and vision loss don't give up and get blown off if they test negative for celiac by the classic blood test, or if get scoffed at if they are not thin and obviously wasting away from gut troubles. THIS IS A CONDITION WHICH CAN BE CONTROLLED and healing CAN take place with diet adherence.

I haven't done the genetic test and I won't, until we finally have something resembling universal health care coverage in this country. I don't want to give the idiots more fodder to tell me I don't have a "gluten problem," if it turned out I wasn't the carrier of the usual ones, and it's irrelevant anyway, as I am strict about diet adherence and don't need the motivation. I already have the motivation because if I slip up, I get symptoms that render my life dysfunctional, and I don't mean a bit of upset tummy.

Have your brother have the full celiac panel done, a.s.a.p. as others have said, but have them look at the brain if he can get a scan looking for damage for MS or whatnot. The "bright spots" of gluten damage brain lesions will look different. Insist he tell the neuro about his first degree relative with gluten intolerance. Do a google search of "Hadjivassiliou gluten ataxia" and print out some of the Pub Med research for the doctor. If and when the testing is done, and there is no resolution or explanation, or, better yet, there is one, then he can try a strict gluten free diet. MAKE SURE if he is given ANY MEDICATION for anything it is GLUTEN FREE. I have also had some big time weirdo reactions to common medications (acid blockers and large doses of ibuprofen taken together... holy moley :blink: ) that made the ataxia a lot worse. It was my old optician that clued me in that I should look at that stuff to see if not taking it made a difference. Sometimes you get the good advice from the unlikely sources.

Oh wow, thanks so much for sharing your experience!! It means a lot to me. I am going to tell my niece everything you said so she can share it with him. He can't read emails anymore because his vision is blurred, so she is sort of taking over his treatment.

Unfortunately he has NO insurance, but we're not letting that stop us at this point.

And my niece says he doesn't believe he has gluten ataxia or that it exists. :( But we aren't giving up -- we're sending him the PubMed reports so he can know it's real. And of course his could be caused by something else, so we don't want to assume this is the only answer.

I realize this is all just starting to sink in for him, so I'm trying not to push him -- yet.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



gatita Enthusiast

Update -- just talked to him and he promised to get the celiac panel done asap! :)

ravenwoodglass Mentor

Update -- just talked to him and he promised to get the celiac panel done asap! :)

Glad to hear that. Just be sure to stress to him that even if the tests come back negative it doesn't mean it isn't gluten ataxia. Encourage him to try the diet after all celiac related testing is done no matter what the results if tests for other stuff comes back negative. Also since the lesions of celiac ataxia resemble the lesions of MS make sure if they find lesions they don't give a MS diagnosis if they haven't done a spinal tap to make sure that is what it is.

gatita Enthusiast

Also since the lesions of celiac ataxia resemble the lesions of MS make sure if they find lesions they don't give a MS diagnosis if they haven't done a spinal tap to make sure that is what it is.

Wow, I didn't know that!

My niece and I will remind him the tests can often show false negatives. Last night he was interested in learning more about the diet, so I started to break it down to him and I think he's going to at least try it. :)

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      127,984
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    henrygreen
    Newest Member
    henrygreen
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121k
    • Total Posts
      70.5k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Okay, it does make sense to continue the gluten challenge as long as you are already in the middle of it. But what will change if you rule it out? I mean, you have concluded that whatever label you want to give the condition, many of your symptoms improved when you went gluten free. Am I correct in that? According to how I understand your posting, the only symptom that hasn't responded to gluten free eating is the bone demineralization. Did I misunderstand? And if you do test positive, what will you do different than you are doing now? You have already been doing for years the main thing you should be doing and that is eating gluten free. Concerning how long you should stay on the gluten challenge, how many weeks are you into it already?
    • WildFlower1
      I mean that I will be re-taking the celiac blood test again while I am currently on the gluten challenge right now, but not sure how many weeks more to keep going, to ensure a false negative does not happen. Thank you.
    • WildFlower1
      Thank you for your help, I am currently in the middle of the gluten challenge. A bit over 6 weeks in. At 4 weeks I got the celiac blood tests and that is when they were negative. So to rule out the false negative, since I’m in the middle of the gluten challenge right now and will never do this again, I wanted to continue consuming gluten to the point to make sure the blood tests are not a false negative - which I did not receive a firm answer for how many weeks total.    My issue is, with these blood tests the doctors say “you are not celiac” and rule it out completely as a potential cause of my issues, when the symptoms scream of it. I want to rule out this 30 year mystery for my own health since I’m in the middle of it right now. Thank you!
    • trents
      I am a male and had developed osteopenia by age 50 which is when I finally got dx with celiac disease. I am sure I had it for at least 13 years before that because it was then I developed idiopathic elevated liver enzymes. I now have a little scoliosis and pronounced kyphosis (upper spine curvature).  All of your symptoms scream of celiac disease, even if the testing you have had done does not. You may be an atypical celiac, meaning the disease is not manifesting itself in your gut but is attacking other body systems. There is such a thing as sero negative celiac disease. But you still have not given me a satisfactory answer to my question of why do you need a differential dx between celiac disease and NCGS when either one would call for complete abstinence from gluten, which you have already been practicing except for short periods when you were undergoing a gluten challenge. Why do you want to put a toxic substance into your body for weeks when, even if it did produce a positive test result for celiac disease, neither you or your doctors would do anything different? Regardless of what doctors are recommending to you, it is your body it is affecting not theirs and they don't seem to have given you any good justification for starting another gluten challenge. Where you live, are doctors kings or something?
    • WildFlower1
      Sorry to put it clearly, at 15, infertility started (tried to word it nicely) meaning menstruation stopped. Which is in correlation to celiac I mean. Thank you. 
×
×
  • Create New...