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knitty kitty

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Celiac.com - Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Support Since 1995

Everything posted by knitty kitty

  1. @C4Celiac Are you supplementing with vitamins and minerals?
  2. @LindzeLindz, Welcome to the forum! You said you've had gallbladder dysfunction, hypothyroidism and Hashimoto's, weight loss, liver function low, PTSD, bloating, constipation, metformin use. Gastrointestinal beriberi is an insufficiency of Thiamine (Vitamin B1) which can cause gastrointestinal symptoms like you've described. Thiamine is needed...
  3. @jeriM, Getting an endoscopy now would give your doctor a baseline with which to compare future endoscopies to track healing. However, "the first do no harm" part seems to get lost with Celiac Disease because doctors don't realize how debilitated we can get when exposed to gluten. Some doctors will make a diagnosis of Celiac based on high blood tests...
  4. @sc'Que? and @Scott Adams and @Jefferson Adams Thought this article was extremely interesting. Intestinal Dysbiosis and Tryptophan Metabolism in Autoimmunity https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7417361/
  5. Nystagmus is a symptom of Thiamine insufficiency or deficiency. Here's a video about Thiamine insufficiency and its effects on the brain. See how much gluten ataxia and thiamine deficiency have in common. The same areas of the brain are affected. White lesions occur in thiamine deficiency in the same areas as those that occur with gluten ataxia...
  6. My eyes would do the jumpy eye thing. I had vitamin deficiencies. I took B Complex and Allithiamine and magnesium. And the jumpy eye thing went away.
  7. @Ginger38, Have you considered a genetic test to see if you have any of the most common Celiac genes? With your symptoms improving on a gluten free diet and genes for Celiac, that can be a positive diagnosis. Thiamine deficiency can cause high glucose levels. The pancreas uses lots of thiamine to make insulin. Have you been checked...
  8. Yes, I've had drenching night sweats. Night sweats are a sign of low Vitamin B12. Low Vitamin D can also cause night sweats or a sweaty head.
  9. A thiamine deficiency would not be caused by the corn prolamins. Thiamine is needed to convert carbohydrates into energy. If you're consuming a high carbohydrate diet, you could be running low on thiamine. Or perhaps it's an oral allergy? Do your lips and tongue burn or swell when eating corn? Some people react to the protein in corn as though...
  10. @Anniehall, For your bulldog, could you feed him raw liver? It's pretty inexpensive and would get his vitamins and minerals up. Thiamine deficiency can cause seizures in dogs as well as people. For your research.... potatoes are from South America....how and when did they get to Germany?
  11. @Felipe, Oh! I'm highly suspicious it's the Ashwagandha. It can affect the thyroid and make it produce too much or too little hormones and speed up your metabolism. I couldn't take Ashwagandha. It's a nightshade. I had started taking it for anxiety, but my thyroid frequently swung high and low, and I lost handfulls of hair. Here's some...
  12. Fatigue, peripheral neuropathy and tinnitus can all be symptoms of thiamine deficiency.
  13. @Felipe, Are you gaining water weight on days you exercise? If you push your thumb into your ankle, does the thumb indentation disappear immediately or does the thumb indentation stay for several seconds? On the days you eat more are you losing water through frequent trips to the loo?
  14. Thanks, @Scott Adams, I like the Neanderthal article! The strains of wheat grown now are different from wheat grown in ancient times. Wheat grown now has been bred (by Mandelian genetics, not GMO) to contain more starches than ancient wheat.
  15. Dysphagia (difficulty swallowing) and sleep apnea (waking up gasping for air) have been identified as symptoms of thiamine insufficiency.
  16. The only time I didn't get contaminated by gluten-free pizza at a take out restaurant was when I was the very first customer as they opened. Mine was the first pizza made and cooked. Clean preparation surfaces after the nightly cleaning? They leave the ovens on all night, so maybe that had something to do with it? Did traces of gluten get roasted...
  17. @trents, At the bottom of the page of Annie's link, the source listed is dated 2009.
  18. @Anniehall, Mange is a result of blood sucking mites. Has your bulldog been checked for anemia? Are you giving him a supplement with vitamins and minerals to replace the ones added to traditional dog food? Supplementing may be a good idea since he's got more veggies in his diet.
  19. You're right, @trents, During the past few decades, there's been an increase in non-European countries adopting the "Western diet" also known as the "Standard American Diet" (SAD). A corresponding increase in the number of people being diagnosed with Celiac Disease is seen as more people move away from their traditional foods and follow the SAD diet...
  20. @Ginger38, Some doctors will make a diagnosis of Celiac Disease if a patient has genes for Celiac Disease and responds positively to the gluten free diet. That's how I was eventually diagnosed.
  21. Oh, absolutely, get the kids tested. Mouth ulcers can be a symptom of B12 deficiency. B12 deficiency can worsen symptoms of ADHD.
  22. @Ginger38, Sorry, I misunderstood. Maybe this recent study will help you feel better. Clinical Value of Tissue Transglutaminase Antibodies in Celiac Patients over a Long Term Follow-Up https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8465060/ And maybe this one... Mean platelet volume can indicate dietary adherence and disease...
  23. @Oliverg, Tinnitus can be caused by low Vitamin B12. Vitamin B12 can also cause sweating, but that's usually night sweats in post menopausal woman. Vitamin D deficiency can cause sweating. The increased sweating could be from high blood sugar. Have you been checked for Diabetes? It might just be high blood sugar from eating gluten...
  24. By tested wonky, I ate sufficient gluten on purpose before blood testing, but still had low numbers. I had Gastrointestinal symptoms, DH, I knew were from the gluten, but not high antibodies in the blood. The level of antibodies in the blood doesn't correspond to the level of damage in the small intestine, either. Celiac seems to work...
  25. @Ginger38, I tested wonky on my blood tests because I have diabetes, but anemia can also mess up blood tests for Celiac Disease. I had a genetic test done, which shows I have two Celiac genes. You can have the genes, but some people's genes are not activated, so they don't have active Celiac, just the potential for it. However, with improvement...
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