<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>> ok, holidays over, getting caught up again. here's the results of my query on blood test results for myself and sons, of which son #1 had high iga with recommended retest in 6 months. ------------ #1 son should continue to eat a normal diet containing gluten until he is retested at least. If you take the gluten out of his diet and he is a celiac--you will not get a positive test. He needs to eat it, and lots of it prior to the next blood test. Once the gluten is removed, the enzymes begin to return to normal in a celiac. Tell Dad not to change his diet yet. If you and the other son have symptoms and feel there is a possibility of celiac with negative enzymes-- You can request your doctor draw blood and do an IgA level. This will tell you if you have an IgA deficiency. Everyone in our family had low levels of IgA and all the blood tests were negative. Once it was determined that everyone was low, biopsies were done and 4 people were diagnosed. Many doctors are not aware of this fact. Good luck with your family. Coralie ---------------- Do not put son no 2 on the gf diet until he is properly diagnosed by intestinal biopsy. If you think he has Celiac, then take him to a GI doctor and have him biopsied. If you put him on the diet before diagnosis, you'll never be sure he has Celiac and since it is such a stringent diet, you really need to be sure for his sake. I have heard many doctors recommend this. As far as if a person has an IgA deficiency, then only their IgG levels will be high. When I had the tests done by Dr. Fasano's lab in Baltimore, they automatically did the IgA deficiency test and they said my sons are not deficient so the IgA blood tests should be accurate. All my sons had high IgG levels and the two oldest were biopsied but neither has Celiac disease. The middle son has some food allergies such as canola and shrimp so this might be why his is high. Barb -------------- You might not want to put your son on a grf diet if you want to know for sure if he has CD. If he has no symptoms and is doing well and feeling fine, I would have him eat normally until tthe 6 mo test. Then you will know for sure if he has it. If you put him on a gf diet now, you will always wonder.... Diane ---------------- Yes, if you have an IgA deficiency you will show false negatives. I have that. I am on a g/f diet for 25 yrs now. I cannot eat gluten and get sick when it sneaks in so that is good enough for docs and me. Rosalie ----------------- I'm a Dutch Ph.D. student working on genetics of celiac disease. I'll try to answer your questions. Each laboratory has their own values of what is normal and what is not. These values are specific for each lab. They test a number of people that do not have celiac disease, and a number that do have the disease. Than they can draw a borderline, below which values someone is negative for CD, and above which a person could have CD. >the form they gave me says iga aga normal (by the elisa method (???)) is <18, >iga igg normal is <24 and the antiendomysium iga normal is <1:4. > >My results: aga iga 14.46 (after being mostly gluten free for 3-4 weeks then >back on for the test for 3-4 weeks), igg 5.64, and ema iga is negative. >their comment is that i have normal antibody levels both aga iga and igg are below the bordeline, and the ema is negative. Ema results come back "negative" or "positive", and are negative in healthy persons. So, based on this test, CD is not expected. Your were not long enough gluten-free to have an effect on this test. That can take quite a long time in adults. >#2 son: iga 6.07, igg 21.56 and ema iga is negative. their comment is that he has normal antibody levels Again, both aga iga and igg are below the bordeline, and the ema is negative. So, same conclusion. >#1 son: iga 24.39, igg 17.16 and ema iga is negative. their comment is that >his iga aga is elevated, repeat the test in 6 months. They are right with their comments. The iga aga is the least sensitive for celiac disease. It can be elevated without any signs of intestinal damage due to gluten ingestion. The ema test is the most sensitive for celiac disease. When this one is postive, then a biopsy is advised, even when the others are negative. So, there is no reason to worry yet. Keep your son on a normal diet, and take the test again later. Het should eat gluten, otherwise it's impossible to make a diagnosis, because the antibodies disappear en the intestines become restored without gluten in the diet. But keep a close eye on him. If he get's really sick, then you should go back sooner. I believe it's important to be sure your son has celiac disease before you put him on a diet. Because the diet is for the rest of his life, and it should be a shame if it was for nothing. But that's my personal opinion. I hope this answers your questions. If not, or you have other questions, you can always email me. Kind regards, Martine van Belzen ------------------------------ Martine was extremely helpful and replied forthwith to further inquiries by me with this result: About your question, an elevated antigliadin IgA level is not a very good indicator for celiac disease. As I said before, the EMA test is the best one. It happens sometimes that a person is only positive for antigliadin IgA, for no apparent reason. It could be that your son is in the process of developing celiac disease. If you would have a biopsy done at this moment, the chance is big that it will be normal. When you wait for some time, and take the bloodtest again, then you can see if there are any changes. If the test comes back more positive (all 3 antibodies positive, or at least a positive EMA), then a biopsy must be taken. If nothing has changed, then he probably doesn't have CD. We advice a biopsy in these cases only when a patient has serious complaints and CD is likely, for example due to celiac disease in close relatives. To summarize, a biopsy should only be taken when there is enough reason to believe that a patient might have CD. In your son's case, it's better to wait a while a see how he does. It would be a shame to put him through this procedure, and have to do it again over a year. ------------------ plus, two requests for results and one more message that basically mirrors what everyone is saying above. thank you all so much for the answers. this whole issue is for some odd reason not coming entirely clear, but i do at least have a very basic understanding of the whole thing now. thanks! susan ;) [log in to unmask]