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ELizardBreath

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  1. Thanks. He takes Vitamin D supplements daily. Before the celiac diagnosis, he was diagnosed with low D and low iron. These will be re-tested in July along with his tTG-IgA levels and a few other things.
  2. They claimed it was border collie, but I think it is mutt with pit bull mixed in... He had 4 homes before it was 10 weeks old and he is still as nervous and active and barky - almost - 10 years later.
  3. He is currently on a low-FODMAP diet too. He doesn't like eggs or nuts. When you say dairy, do you mean lactose - he certainly can't digest lactose right now - or casein? He does like cheese. I keep a food log and am having a hard time seeing any trend. That is, sometimes he vomits after eating cheese, sometimes he doesn't, so it doesn't seem like the cheese...
  4. If you have irritability/rage after gluten exposure, would you share with me how quickly it starts and how long it lasts? For context, my 14-year-old autistic son developed irritability/rage and nausea a year ago. It took about 8 months to get him properly diagnosed with celiac, I kept insisting on tests - it was X, not X, Y, not Y, Z, not Z ... until...
  5. I don't know if Nima Partner capsules work in the old Nima sensors, but I am new to a celiac diagnosis for my autistic son. So I bought both a sensor and capsules at: https://nimapartners.com/
  6. I was wondering if others had a Nima Sensor and were willing to share the foods that tested positive for gluten on their sensors. On mine, gluten-free cheerios and 3 muskateers tested positive so far, along with the dog food.
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