Hello, @Jack Common,
I know how frustrating health mysteries can be. Perhaps you're having a reaction to the medication you were given for the giardiasis you mentioned in another post.
The giardiasis infection would account for the high Igg results. Have you been reinfected?
The site I've linked below has lots of information about the long term consequences of being treated with a medication frequently prescribed for giardiasis infection.
https://hormonesmatter.com/metronidazole-toxicity-doctor-denial/
https://hormonesmatter.com/?s=metronidazole
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3870550/
Please let us know if your symptoms may be due to this reaction to the prescription for giardiasis.
Best wishes.
Hello, @Jack Common,
I know how frustrating health mysteries can be. Perhaps you're having a reaction to the medication you were given for the giardiasis.
The giardiasis infection would account for the high Igg results. Have you been reinfected?
The site I've linked below has lots of information about the long term consequences of being treated with a medication frequently prescribed for giardiasis infection.
https://hormonesmatter.com/metronidazole-toxicity-doctor-denial/
https://hormonesmatter.com/?s=metronidazole
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3870550/
Please let us know if your symptoms may be due to this reaction to the prescription for giardiasis.
Best wishes.
From the article you linked: "Currently, there are no recommended methods to test for non-celiac gluten sensitivity." "No recommended methods" is the key phrase here. Just on the anecdotal evidence of reading many posts on this forum, I think we sometimes see some elevated igg test scores with NCGS. They seem to be mildly elevated in these cases, not high high.