Robinredbreast
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- 18,446
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- Type 1
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- Insulin
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IanD said:So sar as I know I am not coeliac but when I talked to the DUK Careline about low carb, she suggested I was so much better because I was wheat intolerant - nothing to do with carbs ... She did admit she wasn't diabetic, nor was she a health professional.
A LCHF is substantially wheat free, so should be helpful to you whether or not.
hanadr said:I've just m read "Life without Bread" by Christian B. Allen and Wolfgang Lutz.
In this book, there's quite a bit about the benefits of low carb diets and digestive problems.
I think wheat is something that causes problems to lots of people and other grains probably do too. Getting Grain free seems to help a lot.
My daughter's friend was diagnosed Coeliac last year, but is a fussy eater and her progress is variable.[she's using a lot of prescription foods] Another friend has been diagnosed more recently [there's a lot of it about] and she's gone grain free and doing brilliantly.
I'm definitely not coeliac, but I'm trying to get grain free and hoping my sometimes sensitive digestive system will benefit along with my blood sugars.
Hana
sooty26 said:Hi
I have been experiencing really bad nausea since November time.ive lost about 4kgs so underweight now at just under 50kg.ive been tested for coeliac and everything under the sun!just eating a very plain diet as the nausea can come on so suddenly!i hav vomiting/diarrhoea too with it.i took domperidone bit was sick that nite so haven't taken ur since.cyclizine is good to stem the nausea but makes me so tired I can hardly move and really dizzy.im n novorapid and levemir,changed fron lantus about 2years ago when i was having a lit of hypos and tummy upset.tried metoclopramide but they r useless.i can't eat anythin with a lot of flavour so stick to cereal banana pear apple bread chicken and mashed potatoes.stewed apples and custard r really good at settling my tummy if I feel nauseous but hungry too.
The heartburn is horrible but I don't take anything for it.I hav ovarian cysts too which I def think contribute although docs say they can't.my tummy upsets get much worse around that time of the month so I think it's hormonal or something at the very least .
Best of luck to u.
Robinredbreast said:sooty26 said:Hi
I have been experiencing really bad nausea since November time.ive lost about 4kgs so underweight now at just under 50kg.ive been tested for coeliac and everything under the sun!just eating a very plain diet as the nausea can come on so suddenly!i hav vomiting/diarrhoea too with it.i took domperidone bit was sick that nite so haven't taken ur since.cyclizine is good to stem the nausea but makes me so tired I can hardly move and really dizzy.im n novorapid and levemir,changed fron lantus about 2years ago when i was having a lit of hypos and tummy upset.tried metoclopramide but they r useless.i can't eat anythin with a lot of flavour so stick to cereal banana pear apple bread chicken and mashed potatoes.stewed apples and custard r really good at settling my tummy if I feel nauseous but hungry too.
The heartburn is horrible but I don't take anything for it.I hav ovarian cysts too which I def think contribute although docs say they can't.my tummy upsets get much worse around that time of the month so I think it's hormonal or something at the very least .
Best of luck to u.
Hi there sooty ( great name btw) my nausea with the new tablets I'm taking has helped, because I haven't had my head over the toilet for a quite a few days now. One of my worse vomiting episodes was on Good friday and the whole of the Easter weekend was really bad. I also get ' bad tummies' :wink: , small headaches and I also take Novorapid and Levimir and Omperzaloe. I don't know what is going on with my stomach, I have also lost weight but only about 1/2 stone, about the same as you then in Kilos I think? and I am 56.0 kilos today, the same as last week, as I weigh myself every week now at work ( my dr asked me weigh myself once a week).
You are going through such a rough time, I really hope you start to feel a bit better soon and the best of luck to you too :thumbup: Take care and thanks sooty.
etmsreec said:Hi Robinredbreast,
Coeliac and Diabetes are quite common together since they're both autoimmune conditions. Coeliac suffers lose weight because their guts aren't absorbing nutrients from the food that they are eating. There are finger-like protrusions in the gut called villi. When someone is an untreated coeliac the villi flatten out and can't absorb the nutrients. The only treatment for this is a lifelong gluten-free diet. Once gluten is excluded from the diet the villi recover.
A friend of mine is about 6'1 and of relatively light build. He went down to about 7 stone before being diagnosed. Once diagnosed, he didn't think he'd ever stop putting on weight!
Symptoms of untreated coeliac disease are easy to find on the web - tiredness, bloating, diarrhoea, loss of weight,dark foul-smelling stools. Diagnosis is via a duodenal biopsy which will confirm whether the villi are flattened out or not.
A different but related condition, Dermatitus Herpetiformis, causes lesions on the skin. These are like the blisters that you get if your shoes rub, only they can be anywhere on the skin. Treatment for DH is preferably a gluten-free diet but can also require drugs such as Dapsone or Sulfamethoxypyridazine. DH diagnosis tends to be via treatment by Dapsone and via a skin biopsy. Many DH patients also turn out to be coeliac.
Coeliac UK publish the gluten-free food list each year. They also offer advice on gluten-free diet. There are a substantial number of foods available on prescription for coeliac sufferers. There are also a lot of foods now available in supermarkets (the Genius bread products are great, especially the bloomer loaves!)
Steve
etmsreec said:Hi Robinredbreast,
Coeliac and Diabetes are quite common together since they're both autoimmune conditions. Coeliac suffers lose weight because their guts aren't absorbing nutrients from the food that they are eating. There are finger-like protrusions in the gut called villi. When someone is an untreated coeliac the villi flatten out and can't absorb the nutrients. The only treatment for this is a lifelong gluten-free diet. Once gluten is excluded from the diet the villi recover.
A friend of mine is about 6'1 and of relatively light build. He went down to about 7 stone before being diagnosed. Once diagnosed, he didn't think he'd ever stop putting on weight!
Symptoms of untreated coeliac disease are easy to find on the web - tiredness, bloating, diarrhoea, loss of weight,dark foul-smelling stools. Diagnosis is via a duodenal biopsy which will confirm whether the villi are flattened out or not.
A different but related condition, Dermatitus Herpetiformis, causes lesions on the skin. These are like the blisters that you get if your shoes rub, only they can be anywhere on the skin. Treatment for DH is preferably a gluten-free diet but can also require drugs such as Dapsone or Sulfamethoxypyridazine. DH diagnosis tends to be via treatment by Dapsone and via a skin biopsy. Many DH patients also turn out to be coeliac.
Coeliac UK publish the gluten-free food list each year. They also offer advice on gluten-free diet. There are a substantial number of foods available on prescription for coeliac sufferers. There are also a lot of foods now available in supermarkets (the Genius bread products are great, especially the bloomer loaves!)
Steve
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