Guest guest Posted August 15, 2006 Report Share Posted August 15, 2006 Oh heavens no Esther, just keep in mind I'm new to this and have NO idea what is right or wrong. That's why my questions may sound ignorant.. they are..lol. I appreciate your bluntness. I just didn't know if my test came back neg. if that was the end of it. According to my dr. it was. Now I know different! Sorry if my reply was overwhelming.I'm a talkalot by nature.Esther KATIE B.Happy Summer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2006 Report Share Posted August 15, 2006 Two former coworkers, from my days on the payroll, had funny jokes I like to keep in mind: First Joke: Q: What do you call the doctor who graduates bottom of the class at med school? A: " Doctor " Second Joke: You know Medicine. If they can't find it, you ain't got it. This is NOT a slam against doctors on the whole. This is reality. When it comes to celiac, it's REALLY important to keep in mind that just because the biopsy is negative and just because the blood work is negative, the real proof remains in the GF diet. Celiac is a great masquerader. Celiac can be subtle: too subtle for tests but present enough to make you miserable. The problem with celiac is that it is still far more rare than parasites, viruses, bacteria, other food intolerances, and the like. So, if the quick-n-dirty tests don't instantly reveal celiac, the doc doesn't want you to have to be burdened by a GF diet. And don't be fooled: in many ways the GF diet *IS* a burden. But, if it's a burden that frees you, then... well,... " The burden is easy and the yoke is light " - to steal a phrase from The Big JC. > > I just didn't know if my test came back neg. > if that was the end of it. According to my dr. it was. > Now I know different! > You're luckier than I was. Had I found this group earlier I could have spared myself a few years of suffering I bet. In 2000 I was told most emphatically " not celiac " . Believe me, I had gluten for five more years. If only I knew then what I know now! Esther Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2006 Report Share Posted August 15, 2006 Two former coworkers, from my days on the payroll, had funny jokes I like to keep in mind: First Joke: Q: What do you call the doctor who graduates bottom of the class at med school? A: " Doctor " Second Joke: You know Medicine. If they can't find it, you ain't got it. This is NOT a slam against doctors on the whole. This is reality. When it comes to celiac, it's REALLY important to keep in mind that just because the biopsy is negative and just because the blood work is negative, the real proof remains in the GF diet. Celiac is a great masquerader. Celiac can be subtle: too subtle for tests but present enough to make you miserable. The problem with celiac is that it is still far more rare than parasites, viruses, bacteria, other food intolerances, and the like. So, if the quick-n-dirty tests don't instantly reveal celiac, the doc doesn't want you to have to be burdened by a GF diet. And don't be fooled: in many ways the GF diet *IS* a burden. But, if it's a burden that frees you, then... well,... " The burden is easy and the yoke is light " - to steal a phrase from The Big JC. > > I just didn't know if my test came back neg. > if that was the end of it. According to my dr. it was. > Now I know different! > You're luckier than I was. Had I found this group earlier I could have spared myself a few years of suffering I bet. In 2000 I was told most emphatically " not celiac " . Believe me, I had gluten for five more years. If only I knew then what I know now! Esther Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2006 Report Share Posted August 15, 2006 Two former coworkers, from my days on the payroll, had funny jokes I like to keep in mind: First Joke: Q: What do you call the doctor who graduates bottom of the class at med school? A: " Doctor " Second Joke: You know Medicine. If they can't find it, you ain't got it. This is NOT a slam against doctors on the whole. This is reality. When it comes to celiac, it's REALLY important to keep in mind that just because the biopsy is negative and just because the blood work is negative, the real proof remains in the GF diet. Celiac is a great masquerader. Celiac can be subtle: too subtle for tests but present enough to make you miserable. The problem with celiac is that it is still far more rare than parasites, viruses, bacteria, other food intolerances, and the like. So, if the quick-n-dirty tests don't instantly reveal celiac, the doc doesn't want you to have to be burdened by a GF diet. And don't be fooled: in many ways the GF diet *IS* a burden. But, if it's a burden that frees you, then... well,... " The burden is easy and the yoke is light " - to steal a phrase from The Big JC. > > I just didn't know if my test came back neg. > if that was the end of it. According to my dr. it was. > Now I know different! > You're luckier than I was. Had I found this group earlier I could have spared myself a few years of suffering I bet. In 2000 I was told most emphatically " not celiac " . Believe me, I had gluten for five more years. If only I knew then what I know now! Esther Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2006 Report Share Posted August 15, 2006 Is it worth bothering with tests? or should I just do an elimination diet?esther_p210 wrote: Two former coworkers, from my days on the payroll, had funnyjokes I like to keep in mind:First Joke:Q: What do you call the doctor who graduates bottom of the classat med school?A: "Doctor"Second Joke:You know Medicine. If they can't find it, you ain't got it.This is NOT a slam against doctors on the whole. This is reality.When it comes to celiac, it's REALLY important to keep in mindthat just because the biopsy is negative and just because theblood work is negative, the real proof remains in the GF diet.Celiac is a great masquerader. Celiac can be subtle: too subtlefor tests but present enough to make you miserable.The problem with celiac is that it is still far more rare thanparasites, viruses, bacteria, other food intolerances, and thelike. So, if the quick-n-dirty tests don't instantly revealceliac, the doc doesn't want you to have to be burdened by aGF diet. And don't be fooled: in many ways the GF diet *IS* a burden.But, if it's a burden that frees you, then... well,... "Theburden is easy and the yoke is light" - to steal a phrase fromThe Big JC.>> I just didn't know if my test came back neg. > if that was the end of it. According to my dr. it was. > Now I know different!> You're luckier than I was. Had I found this group earlier I couldhave spared myself a few years of suffering I bet.In 2000 I was told most emphatically "not celiac". Believe me,I had gluten for five more years. If only I knew then what I know now!Esther __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2006 Report Share Posted August 16, 2006 The tests have their merit if you keep in mind that they aren't perfect. They aren't perfect but they're the best that is available now. In my own case, a thousand other causes for my misery had been ruled out: virus, bacteria, parasite, gall bladder issues, ulcer, ulcerating colitis, and more. Each of those is more likely than celiac. And even celiac is more likely than the other rare they found that I have: lymphocytic colitis. So, if your doc has ruled out more common causes of misery and yet you remain miserable, Doc can try to rule in/rule out celiac with tests. But if you take the tests and the docs say " Nope, not celiac " ... and you have no place left to turn... try cutting out all gluten (in even its ten gazillion hidey places). (Leaving even a little smidge of gluten in the diet will perpetuate the misery if you are celiac.) The real question, then, becomes " Why do the tests? " Because they're easier to do than the gluten free diet. They take a few days out of your life at most. And if they rule celiac IN, then you have an answer and can go forward with a clear mind and a clear firm plan. Trying an elimination diet is the TRUE proof, in my opinion. But it's a lot of work and a steep learning curve. And it will take some time to show its results. I'm typing with a heavy sigh. I wish I could give you an easy answer. But the reality of this ailment is that nothing is easy: finding it, dealing with it. But if you discover, via tests or via experimenting with diet, that you should be gluten-free, then you will go gluten-free and never look back. You will feel worlds better if this is the answer you need. Honest. You will find gluten-free versions of your favorites and you will like them. You will not miss the pain from the old way of life. You will even stop using the word " substitute " (as in " gluten-free substitute for pizza " ). You will be happy to simply say " gluten free pizza " and know that it can be just as yummy as its poison-based cousin. I send you an e-hug. I was equally as lost as you feel just a year ago right now. A year ago right now I was in mind-numbing body-bending misery. I had the blood tests a year ago this week. I got the answer " ambiguous, further testing needed " a year ago next week. I took the colonoscopy and endoscopy a year ago next month. And October 1 I went GF, even though the GI doc was saying " NOT celiac " . My primary care doc's nurse practitioner, who'd seen me suffer for SO LONG, said " Go gluten-free any way. It can't hurt you. And if it helps you, then you will have the true answer. " When I read on the web that many (not all) folks who have lymphocytic colitis are helped by a GF diet, then I told myself to bite the bullet and go GF. Sept 30, 2005 was my last deliberate good bite of gluten. Couldn't even tell you what it was. Since 9/30/2005, I've had other bites of gluten and WISH I HADN'T. They're so small that I can't even tell you what they were and I certainly didn't relish them. But even though they're too small to be seen, they pack a whallop. (Just like that commercial about the blood clots, the ad for Plavix... " Joe was no match for something 1 millionth his size: a clot. " The celiac corrolary is " Esther is no match for something one millionth her size: a crouton crumb in the sauce on the chicken in a meal at a restaurant. " ) Hang in there!!!!!! Esther in RI > > Is it worth bothering with tests? or should I just do an elimination diet? > >... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2006 Report Share Posted August 16, 2006 Esther, You should write a book. You are so good at putting things into the written word! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2006 Report Share Posted August 16, 2006 > > > Esther, > You should write a book. You are so good at putting things > into the written word! > > " There is no more dangerous gift to posterity than a few cleverly turned platitudes. " As for Esther Paris, she would write immortal literature if she were sure enough about anything to risk telling any one else about it. (Should I apologize to F. Fitzgerald? I promise I will the next time I visit his grave. (I have visited it once. Honest.)) http://www.bartleby.com/115/15.html I used to be a writer. I wrote technical manuals about software. Ho hum. Then I " upgraded " to the job of system's administrator because I thought it would be SO GLAMOUROUS to have all computer privileges and to know all the answers all the time. I didn't realize it was the most thankless job in the known Universe and that I would not enjoy it so much. Nowadays, I've traded that all in for my new job: - lots of travel - literature, great and small - learning about new cuisines (specializing in PB&J, Mac & Cheese) - managing the finances of 100% of an enterprise - part medicine, part counselor, part guru My title? " MOM " But the one great thing about my job as a system administrator is that it led to my current job. I met my hubby via email at work LONG before email dating was commonplace! We emailed for 6 months, living in two different states, before we finally met face-to-face. Esther in RI Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2006 Report Share Posted August 17, 2006 I agree, I love reading your posts!!!! > > > Esther, > You should write a book. You are so good at putting things into the written word! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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