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<blockquote data-quote="Josie" data-source="post: 134698" data-attributes="member: 1792"><p>In my experience, the celiac tests don't rule out a problem with gluten. It may mean, by definition, no celiac disease but eliminating gluten may eliminate the problem. My younger daughter complained of stomach pain until she was 8 and we removed all traces of gluten from her diet. She had several celiac blood tests done over the years which were all negative. We then discovered her stomach hurt when she had soy and milk, too.</p><p></p><p>I did testing at <a href="http://www.Enterolab.com" target="_blank">www.Enterolab.com</a>. They test for gluten, casein, soy, eggs, and yeast. The test gave me the incentive to try eliminating all gluten but it was the diet results that convinced me. So you could save the money and just try the diet.</p><p></p><p>At <a href="http://www.celiac.com" target="_blank">www.celiac.com</a>, probably half the people don't have an official diagnosis of celiac disease but are gluten free anyway.</p><p></p><p>I recently did food allergy testing for my daughter, and she didn't have an allergy to gluten. I asked them about it and they said there were different responses for allergies/intolerances.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Josie, post: 134698, member: 1792"] In my experience, the celiac tests don't rule out a problem with gluten. It may mean, by definition, no celiac disease but eliminating gluten may eliminate the problem. My younger daughter complained of stomach pain until she was 8 and we removed all traces of gluten from her diet. She had several celiac blood tests done over the years which were all negative. We then discovered her stomach hurt when she had soy and milk, too. I did testing at [url]www.Enterolab.com[/url]. They test for gluten, casein, soy, eggs, and yeast. The test gave me the incentive to try eliminating all gluten but it was the diet results that convinced me. So you could save the money and just try the diet. At [url]www.celiac.com[/url], probably half the people don't have an official diagnosis of celiac disease but are gluten free anyway. I recently did food allergy testing for my daughter, and she didn't have an allergy to gluten. I asked them about it and they said there were different responses for allergies/intolerances. [/QUOTE]
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