Hi. I'm hoping that this might help someone who is trying to get better.
My journey included many misdiagnoses, one un-needed surgery for incontinence, therapy because I was so (to put it simply) messed up, and a lot of self-doubt when dealing with the wrong doctor. Here are the highlights of frustration:
1. I had a negative blood test.
2. I had a negative biopsy.
3. When I had vitamin panels done of my blood, the levels of vitamins in my blood were low. (If your doctor is difficult, and you can't get a new one, try forcing them to do a vitamin panel of your blood and then force them to explain to you why you don't have appropriate levels. )
4. I went to an allergist asking for hundreds of dollars in skin tests. He said he'd make a lot of money off of me if he did them, but it wouldn't be a definitive test. He (Dr. Howland in Austin, Texas who is celiac himself) said to get the $99.00 stool test from Enterolabs. I chose to order that and the genetic one from Entero Labs, but he had said the $99.00 would have been satisfactory.
* Doctors don't as a rule seem to be well-educated in nutrition and chemistry or preventative care. They also don't seem to do many stool tests. My friend is a vet, who of course does stool tests. Her first degree was also in chemistry. She looked at the test and said it made perfect sense to her. Looking in the blood for a reaction makes no sense because it is in the stomach and intestines where food reactions occur. This coincided with what Dr. Howland said about why skin and blood tests aren't necessarily conclusive. He said blood and skin tests are such a gray area that the serve more to confuse than actually help. I trust the man because he refused to take my money for an expensive skin test. And, I highly doubt he gets any "kick-back" for the $99.00 test he suggested I get from Enterolabs. And, well, he is celiac himself so he understands.
5. I found out that I am positive for gluten sensitivity and that I have TWO genes for celiac. This means my mother has at least one and my father has at least one. This make sense because my mother has a sister with mental illness of the schizophrenic variety and my cousin (Dad's side) is diagnosed schizophrenic. My mother is a nurse, her ill sister is a pharmacist, they have a brother who is a doctor. They are all wonderful people, but REFUSE to consider that there is an ailment that can be solved from food rather than prescription. But that is another story...
6. My sister and I shared a room growing up, so she saw the "real" me who was struggling with various issues all my life rather than the "public" part of me that drank cans of mountain dew to self-medicate. When her son was having problems similar to me pre-diagnosis, she was wonderful enough to get him tested with Enterolabs as well. With a gluten free /dairy free diet he is so much improved.
7. She also, at the recommendation of a great doctor, has used a vitamin from Thorne Pharmacueticals called Nutri-ADD.
http://www.thorne.com/home.wss - Interestingly, the ingredients of it seem to make sense based on an enzyme activity article I recently found. Admittedly, I don't understand it all - but I'm going back to school for medicine now. Hopefully with a few more chemistry classes under my belt I'll comprehend more of it. In the mean time, it is simply interesting.
Good luck to everyone who is struggling with this. Hopefully I'll get a new degree, do some research and isolate the enzyme we need!