20th February 2005
If you have wheat intolerance, then the reason you are improving has nothing to do with the shots. It's because you quit eating wheat.
I have celiac disease - wheat intolerance, not wheat allergies. If you have the same, there's no cure except complete abstinence from wheat gluten. I get reactions from even the tiny amount of food starch in one Bayer aspirin or a vitamin. Even oat meal is bad, and that has only a trace of the gluten that wheat has. A few drops of soy sauce will trigger reactions. Think of wheat and wheat gluten as rat poison - no amount is good.
Read everything you can about celiac disease and the associate eczema on the web. Very few American doctors diagnosis this properly, on average it takes them 10-20 years to eventually discover it in a patient. So you'll need to do it yourself and coach your doctor along.
I had been sick for 43 years prior to me figuring this out. My daughters were sick contiuously for 15 and 18 years respectively: allergies, stuffed nose, asthma, skin rashes in knees and elbows, dry skin, weakness, chronic fatigue, colds every two weeks, bloating, gas, pain...
Good luck, you may have this very common celiac disease. Wheat Gluten-free is difficult, but it's well worth it.
I have celiac disease - wheat intolerance, not wheat allergies. If you have the same, there's no cure except complete abstinence from wheat gluten. I get reactions from even the tiny amount of food starch in one Bayer aspirin or a vitamin. Even oat meal is bad, and that has only a trace of the gluten that wheat has. A few drops of soy sauce will trigger reactions. Think of wheat and wheat gluten as rat poison - no amount is good.
Read everything you can about celiac disease and the associate eczema on the web. Very few American doctors diagnosis this properly, on average it takes them 10-20 years to eventually discover it in a patient. So you'll need to do it yourself and coach your doctor along.
I had been sick for 43 years prior to me figuring this out. My daughters were sick contiuously for 15 and 18 years respectively: allergies, stuffed nose, asthma, skin rashes in knees and elbows, dry skin, weakness, chronic fatigue, colds every two weeks, bloating, gas, pain...
Good luck, you may have this very common celiac disease. Wheat Gluten-free is difficult, but it's well worth it.
