Guest guest Posted October 8, 2006 Report Share Posted October 8, 2006 Hi. My name is Isaiah. And since people usually assume I'm male because of my name, I should probably mention I'm a woman ;-P (Yeah, another girl with a boys name). I am 25 and I live in North Oakland. I'm originally from New York but moved out here 6 years ago. I made the mistake of going GF *before* I went to the GI doc or got any tests done. I had great results from the GF diet (the urgent D after every meal stopped, the bloating and gas and heartburn decreased, the migratory parasthesias and other neurological stuff improved, etc). The doc said " the proof is in the pudding " but that I should still get tested. Well, by the time he ordered the blood test I'd been completely GF for 2 months (wheat-free for longer). He also seems very misinformed about CD, in that he told me I did NOT need to be eating gluten in order to take the blood test... I now know this is wrong. So, instead of getting the blood test I got tested by Enterolab (a controversial method, I'm aware) which showed that I have gluten intolerance, casein and soy intolerance, and that I have one Celiac gene, one Gluten Intolerance gene. I thought that would be a good start and would be more accurate since I'd been GF for a while. The problem is, now that I have these results from Enterolab there's part of me that wants a straight, medically accepted definitive answer about whether I have CD. So... I tried to go on a gluten challenge. BIG MISTAKE. I got so sick I couldn't even make it 24 hours on the gluten challenge! And this was with only 1-2 servings of gluten a day (less than the recommended 3 for a gluten challenge). So I'm not sure what to do at this point. It's clear that a gluten challenge is just not worth the sickness and discomfort and pain. But if I don't do the challenge, I won't get accurate blood test or biopsy results. Which means I may go the rest of my life not being taken seriously by the medical establishment as having CD or even a gluten intolerance. The only " proof " I have is the symptoms I had (which are consistent with CD) and the unambiguously positive response to the GF diet. I think I can accept that as enough information for now, but I still fear being dismissed by doctors and sometimes wonder if I should deal with being sick for 3 months for the challenge in order to get accurate an accurate blood test & biopsy. I've been fully GF since 7/06 (after having been wheat-free on and off for a few years prior). I now also know that dairy (casein) and soy are making me sick but I have a hard time accepting this and dealing with the fact that I need to eliminate them from my already-strict diet. But I've cut back on dairy and soy a lot and maybe one day I'll have the self-discipline to go all the way. One thing at a time. One positive thing about this change of lifestyle is that it's gotten me really excited about cookign again, out of necessity. Though I do eat out sometimes (Ajanta and Socca Oven, both in Berkeley, are faves) I do tons of cooking for myself now and have learned to make a GF version of almost everything... About to start working on creating GF knishes, which should be quite a project. I'm also way more conscious of what I'm putting in my body and how it makes me feel, which I think is a good thing even though it can be depressing and limiting at times. I really appreciate the support of this list, it's such a great resource. Isaiah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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