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HannahBick

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

Everything posted by HannahBick

  1. For some people, celiac disease can become latent but this only happens in a minority of cases. You're lucky to have a doctor who is aware of the serious issues surrounding this disease. My husband was diagnosed over 40 years ago as a very sick child and both he and our PCP did not think our kids needed to be screened for the disease, since they never...
  2. There may be a quicker and easier way to diagnose celiac disease in the future. I just finished watching a video from the Celiac Disease Foundation of Dr. Bob Anderson speaking about a potential diagnostic test that may not require the 6-12 week gluten challenge.
  3. One of my daughters decided to eat a piece of regular birthday cake early last week at a friend's house. She never let them know about her new diet and figured this was a one-off event and the worst that could happen is the mild symptoms she'd become used to having would return for a short time. Three hours later she experienced severe food poisoning...
  4. A 6-week gluten challenge is often enough for people to show changes on biopsy. As long as you are willing to follow the gluten free diet for the rest of your life (from this day forward, for better, for worse), and you don't mismanage the situation by eating gluten-containing food once in a while, I think you have made the right decision. Further...
  5. Didn't see this before ^ Is it possible to get tested/diagnosed and not have the results placed on your record? Is there a way to pay a bit extra for privacy in this regard? I think getting diagnosed is worthwhile, but didn't give the issue you mentioned above much thought.
  6. For where you're at in the challenge, I think it is worth it. If you have that piece of paper your friends and family members are more likely to take your condition seriously. Also, first degree relatives of a celiac patient are also at an increased risk for developing celiac disease, even if asymptomatic and they are more likely to be willing to get...
  7. My husband would argue that you are lucky to have been diagnosed later in life! Did you have absolutely no symptoms prior to that? A lot of people I’ve talked to in the celiac support group say they had mild, inapparent symptoms throughout their lives but at some point their health took a dive and problems became very apparent. I suspect my husband i...
  8. You nailed it CDInSanDiego! I'll quote you the next time my kids complain. My husband was diagnosed with celiac in the late 1960s as a very sick young child. It was considered a rare childhood illness and he was crippled by eating gluten. He still feels very sorry for himself that he has been one of the very few who has had to be gluten free since...
  9. Thank you for all the recipes! All of my sons and daughters (including the non-celiac ones) have been gluten free for the past few weeks and I can't believe the difference it has made in their health. It's a miracle! For the first time, my youngest (learning disabled) is actually communicating in sentences. They are sleeping through the night and sugar is...
  10. Many people can have some of the signs and symptoms of celiac disease, but not have celiac disease at the time of testing and then if you wait long enough they get celiac disease later on.
  11. My good friend with celiac disease was there with me when he got home. He brought some regular non-gluten-free biscuits for the kids and even offered them to said friend before he remembered that she too can't have them. Go figure. I told my husband about the kids in front of her so I could have her support. He appeared calm at the time and for the rest of...
  12. I will find out when he gets home tonight. The gastroenterologist wrote a letter for each of them to certify that they have celiac disease and require a strict, lifelong gluten free diet so at least if my husband isn't happy he can go and argue with the GI specialist.
  13. Thank you all for your help and support over these past few weeks. The kids have had their EGD and the results are in. Only two of the 10 had a normal biopsy. They all have the DQ2 gene and I don't carry any of the celiac genes so it had to come from their father. The entire household (including myself, at least for a while) will be going gluten free.
  14. I've been told that a lot of PCPs have this attitude about celiac. Ours hasn't even evaluated my husband's diet. We don't live near a university medical center so that doesn't help. At the moment I am using up the non-gluten-free items while I wait for all the kids to get scoped and treating them to Dunkin Donuts, Oreo cookies and Pizza. They are aware that...
  15. I have taken my children to a different doctor, who was recommended by a celiac friend of mine. 7 out of the 10 children have tested positive, and all of them are scheduled for an EGD at different times (since they all have signs/symptoms). I'm not surprised since they (and I) have all eaten a lot of unhealthy high-gluten food for so long, far more than most...
  16. Should we even refer to the HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8 genes as 'celiac genes'? A lot of people seem to think that everyone who is HLA-DQ2/8 positive is potentially a case of celiac disease waiting to be triggered but I just don't think that's the case. Surely there must be other genes involved as well. I heard there are 30+ additional genes.
  17. Do realise that she may have developed celiac disease anyway, even had she not encountered the 'food poisoning' incident. I heard from an MD friend of mine that a recent study showed that infections did not seem to influence celiac risk.
  18. My husband (who is celiac) doesn't want our children tested even though some are showing symptoms. 4-6 months is a very short time interval to develop full blown Type l diabetes from the initial onset of autoimmunity. I would have thought 4-6 years would have been a more likely timeframe. Was your daughter completely gluten free before December last year...
  19. I think the prevalence much higher too. It seems like a lot of our friends are celiac and at least a few families we know have more than one affected member. My husband is celiac (diagnosed several decades ago) and I am pretty sure some of our kids are as well, even though the spouse doesn't want to admit it or have them screened because of our tight budget...
  20. I think there are going to be some tears, at least for a few of them. Most of them adore bread even though I don't believe it necessarily adores them back. One of the children had a bowel movement earlier today, forgot to flush the loo and it absolutely stank. I think my husband has wanted to live his life through his children since he missed out on...
  21. Thanks for your replies. One question though. Should I let them put my kids through an endoscopy? I'm happy for them to run the blood and gene tests but am very uneasy about the risks of them going through the biopsy procedure. It seems too invasive and traumatic just to get a diagnosis. Can't they just go gluten free from positive bloodwork? I know other...
  22. That seems a bit harsh. I would think that an occasional "gluten free" pizza from the pizza parlor would be fine, especially if she is with her friends and it only happens once in a while. Tests were conducted on Domino's pizzas several years ago. They tested below 20ppm.
  23. I'm getting the kids tested. I'll pay for it if I need to. I just feel like we're being socially irresponsible by not getting them screened. It's not fair on other school students who are following a gluten free diet and have few options in the cafeterias due to so few celiacs knowing they have the condition. The more I learn, it seems like the undiagnosed...
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