Guest guest Posted September 9, 2004 Report Share Posted September 9, 2004 I orginally posted this on the celiac board, but I wish everyone with an autistic, speech delayed, or sensory intergration disordered child would read it, because that's what my daughter HAD. (she's still got a speech delay, but not like before...please read on (the autistic tendancies and Sensory problems are GONE! Yeah!) Subject: IMO biopsy and testing aren't as important as..... your very own observations. My little girl was originally label autistic, but after an OT advised us to explore food allergies which led us to a GI and the gluten free diet (which I had SERIOUS doubts about), after two weeks on the diet, this totally non verbal two and a half year old started to babble, 4 weeks in she was saying words. Within days (the first few she just cried and had temper tantrums) but within days her glassy, hazy eyes seemed to focus and she made eye contact. She stopped eating like a horse and ate like a normal person. This little girl who couldn't stand to be touched, couldn't stand the feeling of her clothes or any even slightly loud sound is now doing amazing well and is no longer the child she was, she looks at us, talks to us, and is VERY affectionate, where before we couldnt even touch her. Her body has gone from 22 to almost 40 pounds in less than two years, her ribs no longer stick out, her belly no longer looks pregnant, and she finally has some muscle tone. She is no longer considered autistic, but does still have some lingering developmental delays, such as speech and fine and gross motos skills, that seems to be due from the malabsorption she experienced from the time she went on table food as a baby until she got gluten free. my then two year old daughter had two biopsies, which is supposed to be the definative way to diagnose celiac disease. Her villi seemed intact. Her IGG and AGG were slighltly elevated. By the textbook, since her biopsy seemed normal, she didn't have celiac, however, both times she went off of her gluten free diet, her strange symtoms IMMEDIATELY returned. Her doctor told us that we should keep her on a gluten free diet for life, that her case was very unusual, but he saw with his own eyes what gluten did to her each time she ate it for two weeks. He officially calls her " totally gluten intollerant " I'm just posting this because I want people to know that the tests are not necesarilly 100 percent. Here's what happens to her if she eats just a speck of wheat or other gluten containing food, even if she puts a sticker in her mouth bad burning red rash on her cheeks. stomach aches bad, bad diarrhea spacy, glassy look in her eyes, severe ADD symptoms lack of speech (she's speech delayed, but her speech is even more slurred and murky when eating gluten) lack of impulse control loose, foul smelling stools that often have undigested food in them I'm sorry for such a long post, but I just want to get our story out Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 9, 2004 Report Share Posted September 9, 2004 what is the guleten free diet? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2004 Report Share Posted September 10, 2004 > what is the guleten free diet? www.celiac.com Traci Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2004 Report Share Posted September 10, 2004 Gluten is a protein found in grains, wheat, rye oats and barley. The hard part is, so many food additives and fillers are derivatives of these grains, so a gluten free diet isn't the easiest thing to follow. Many kids with developmental delays may have an inability to tolerate gluten, when the body encounters gluten, there is an autoimmune reaction (when the body doesn't recognize it's own cells and starts killing them off like invaders) and this make the kids intestines not absorb vitamins correctly. We try to give my daughter whole foods, nothing processed, she lives on salad, chicken, rice, eggs, plain vegetables. She cannot eat regular bread, but we get bread from our local health food store made of soy or rice or potato flour. if you do a google search on gluten- free, you'll find much more information. I really believe that if I didn't discover this diet, my daughter would be non verbal still. She still has speech delays, she is almost 4 1/2 and puts together long sentences, but she leaves out letters and shortens words still. but she's come a long way! we can understand about 50-75 precent of what she says. I think the gluten caused malabsorption of vital nutrients while she was younger and this affected her brain. I think the damage would have continued had we not found this diet. Please read up on it, it's worth a try, it's free, you don't have to go to the doctor or anything, it's healthy and you can find so much information on the web, and if you're careful about what you buy, you can feed your child foods found right in the supermarket. Good luck! In , " Baudin " <j_cipriano@h...> wrote: > what is the guleten free diet? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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