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written by reader Celiac Disease and the Ubiquitous Gluten-Free Diet

By Michael Jorrin, "Doc Gumshoe", February 27, 2015

[ed. note: Michael Jorrin, who I like to call “Doc Gumshoe,” is a medical writer (not a doctor) who shares his thoughts with our readers a couple times a month. He does not generally cover investing topics, but I find his discussions of broader health issues interesting and useful. Enjoy!]

Doc Gumshoe would not be posting a piece about celiac disease if it weren’t for the fact that he (along with just about everybody else alive and breathing, in these parts at least) is daily assailed by offerings of gluten-free this and that. In our own town a cute little shop has sprung up to supply residents with gluten-free treats, and of course the grocery store has lots and lots of gluten-free items.

So what’s going on? Are there really that many people with celiac disease who require a gluten-free diet? Or is it something else?

As a jumping-off place into this potentially tricky quagmire, permit me to stake out my own basic position on this. I am not doing this because I wish to engage the proponents of the gluten-free diet – who are also likely to be partisans of managing health through diet, life-style adjustments, and supplements – in a protracted war of words. I have already, in a previous post, made it as clear as I could that the feud between advocates of mainline medicine and those of alternative health is mostly unnecessary and unproductive. At the same time, it’s also clear that there are fashions and trends in health, and some of them don’t make a whole lot of sense.

Here’s the Doc Gumshoe position in a nutshell:

• Celiac disease is a serious, potentially fatal medical condition, for which there is no known treatment other than the gluten-free diet.

• However, celiac disease is relatively uncommon, and lots of people without celiac disease have adopted the gluten-free diet based on the belief that it is somehow “healthy.” But this diet confers no benefit whatsoever on persons who do not have this condition – in fact, it is likely to bring significant and specific harms.

What, exactly, is celiac disease?

In normal digestion, the contents of the stomach pass into the small intestine, which is where almost all of the nutrient extraction takes place. In the stomach, whatever we ate has been churned up and subjected to an acid bath, and sugars have already been converted into glucose and absorbed into the circulation, and the resulting slurry descends into the small intestine. There, nutrients from this slurry are removed. The agents for this removal are called villi, plural of the Latin villus, meaning “tuft of hair. In effect, the mucosal lining of our small intestine is totally covered with these villi, which extract all manner of nutrients from the matter passing through.

In celiac disease, for reasons that are not totally understood, the villi atrophy. Instead of being covered with villi, the lining of the small intestine in persons with celiac disease are relatively smooth. This has a number of consequences, ranging from deficiencies in a number of nutrients to effects on the quality of the stool, which is now carrying matter that would, in the normal process of digestion, have been removed from the intestinal tract.

The symptoms of celiac disease arising from this can be mild or severe. Some individuals with mild or early stage disease may experience only fatigue or anemia. Diarrhea is common, and the character of the diarrhea is somewhat unusual: it is light-colored, greasy (because lipids have not been absorbed), voluminous, and evil-smelling. Severe pain, stomach cramps, and bloating may occur because of the volume of gas generated in the gut. As the disease progresses, individuals can become severely malnourished. Persons with untreated celiac disease appear to be at a higher risk for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and also risk of developing ulcers of the small intestine.

The nutrients in which persons with celiac disease may be deficient include carbohydrates and fats, several minerals (iron, calcium, and others), and several vitamins (A, B12, D, E, K, and folic acid).

And celiac disease symptoms are not limited to the digestive system. Celiac patients have a higher incidence of other autoimmune diseases including Type 1 diabetes mellitus and some skin diseases, as well as liver abnormalities and increased risk of infections.

The term “celiac disease” is singularly imprecise. “Celiac” means nothing more specific than “abdominal.” It is derived from the Greek κοιλιακός (koiliakós), “pertaining to the stomach cavity.” It used to be called “nontropical sprue” or “celiac sprue,” sprue being usually a tropical disease causing some symptoms similar to those in celiac disease.

In other words – to repeat myself – celiac disease is a serious and potentially fatal condition. The question immediately arises, what gives rise to this dadly disease?

How does celiac disease occur?

You notice that I am avoiding the word “cause.” The trigger has been confidently identified as gliadin, which is a gluten protein found in wheat. Some other grains such as barley, rye, and some wheat varieties such as durum and spelt, have similar gluten proteins. These gluten proteins react with an enzyme called tissue transglutaminase (tTG) which modifies the gluten protein such that it sets off an autoimmune reaction. The specific mechanism of this reaction at the cellular or molecular level is exceedingly complex, and there is debate as to which of the actors – the gliadin/gluten protein or the tTG enzyme – is responsible for the several manifestations of celiac disease. The T cells are involved, and it’s thought that these busy reservists in the immune army may be subverted to attack villi. Immunoglobulin A (IgA) is also involved, and along with tTG is considered a celiac disease marker.

However, to call gluten proteins the “cause” of celiac disease, as many commonly available sources do, is a considerable overstatement. I say this confidently, seeing that the great majority of the planet’s population consumes gluten without developing celiac disease. What makes gluten trigger celiac disease in a small minority while having no adverse effect at all on the majority is the question which much research is trying to answer. Favored candidates are a couple of variants of the HLA-DQ protein; most celiac patients have one or the other of those two. However, HLA-DQ cannot be said to be determinative, since up to a third of the general population has those genetic components and most of these people do not have celiac disease. Therefore, some additional factors must be involved.

Identifying the cause of celiac disease is a major part of the puzzle. Another part, perhaps with less impact on treatment, is figuring out why a genetic disposition to celiac disease has persisted in our species, since it is clearly the opposite of a survival characteristic. Consider for a moment the condition of lactose intolerance. This condition emerges gradually as infants are weaned; obviously, newborns cannot be lactose-intolerant or they would not survive. But as a child’s diet moves away from dependence on milk, the capacity to absorb lactose can diminish and disappear, and this happens very commonly in populations where milk products are not part of the normal adult diet. However, in populations, such as those in Europe where milk products early became essential parts of the diet, lactose intolerance was clearly an evolutionary albatross. Thus, in persons of mostly European descent, the prevalence of lactose intolerance is less than 5%, while in parts of Africa and Asia it approaches 100% in adults.

The same evolutionary pressures could apply to celiac disease; after all, humans have been consuming gluten-containing grains for 10,000 years or so. How can this potentially disabling genetic characteristic have been passed on? A possible answer is that celiac disease confers some as yet unidentified evolutionary advantage. An analogy might be the prevalence of sickle-cell anemia in some populations, particularly in central Africa. The explanation for this is that sickle-cell anemia confers protection against malaria; thus, it is a distinct survival advantage in regions where malaria is endemic. (We’ll see whether, as malaria comes increasingly under control, sickle-cell loses its evolutionary benefit and disappears – wait a thousand years or so.)

Is it possible that there is a similar connection between celiac disease and some unsuspected disease or condition that celiac disease protects against?

In any case, I can easily understand why even the remote possibility that eating gluten-containing foods could actually cause celiac disease would be of considerable concern. Whether this is a legitimate concern or not depends on the details, and here are some details.

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How common is celiac disease?

In a word, not common at all. Here are some data: First, a rigorous study done by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) in 2009-2010. This survey included 7,798 persons, median age 45. All had blood tests for IgA and tTG and were questioned about prior diagnoses of celiac disease and whether they were on a gluten-free diet. Based on this information, the prevalence of celiac disease in the US was estimated to be 0.71%, or 1 in 141 persons, similar to that in most European populations. Most of the individuals in the NHANES cohort who were found to have celiac disease according to these criteria were undiagnosed. However, the number of people on a gluten-free diet exceeded the number of diagnosed celiac disease patients by a factor of 10.

Depending on how celiac disease is defined, prevalence estimates vary. If we’re talking about diagnosed clinical disease, about 1 in 1750 persons are affected. If the marker is IgA / tTG in blood samples, the prevalence may be as much as 1 in 105 persons. Persons of African, Chinese, and Japanese descent rarely have celiac disease, and Hispanics seem to have a significantly lower incidence than people of European descent.

A question that the prevalence data pushes to the forefront is this: considering that the number of people with serologically-confirmed celiac disease is about 10 to 15 times greater than the number of people with clinically-confirmed celiac disease, does this not mean that there should be a focus on managing disease in individuals before clinical symptoms emerge? In other words, should all persons with elevated markers for celiac disease be on a gluten-free diet even if they have no clinical symptoms? And does this suggest that the entire population be screened for celiac disease?

Let’s look at the second question first.

Who should be screened for celiac disease?

Here are the recommendations, from the American College of Gastroenterology, as of May 2013:

Recommendations

  1. Patients with symptoms, signs, or laboratory evidence suggestive of malabsorption, such as chronic diarrhea with weight loss, steatorrhea, postprandial abdominal pain, and bloating, should be tested for CD. (Strong recommendation, high level of evidence)
  2. Patients with symptoms, signs, or laboratory evidence for which CD is a treatable cause should be considered for testing for CD. (Strong recommendation, moderate level of evidence)
  3. Patients with a first-degree family member who has a confirmed diagnosis of CD should be tested if they show possible signs or symptoms or laboratory evidence of CD. (Strong recommendation, high level of evidence)
  4. Consider testing of asymptomatic relatives with a first-degree family member who has a confirmed diagnosis of CD. (Conditional recommendation, high level of evidence)
  5. CD should be sought among the explanations for elevated serum aminotransferase levels when no other etiology is found. (Strong recommendation, high level of evidence)
  6. Patients with Type I diabetes mellitus (DM) should be tested for CD if there are any digestive symptoms, or signs, or laboratory evidence suggestive of CD. (Strong recommendation, high level of evidence)

The emphasis here is clearly on signs and symptoms, followed by laboratory evidence. The symptoms mentioned are the same as the ones we described earlier (steatorrhea is the technical term for the type of diarrhea mentioned above). The laboratory evidence is the presence of IgA and tTG in blood samples. Because of the possibility that first-degree relatives may be susceptible, they too are potentially candidates for screening. And, because of possible links with liver disorders, persons with elevated liver enzymes may be candidates for screening, as are persons with T1DM with suggestive symptoms. Testing for celiac disease includes upper endoscopy with biopsy of the duodenum, which is a tube connecting the stomach with the rest of the small intestine. This is not a routine procedure, and there has to be good reason for doing it; thus, the American College of Gastroenterology has stated its recommendations in such as way as to make it clear that there has to be reasonable suspicion of celiac disease before carrying out this procedure.

We should point out here that there is an immense difference between screening for celiac disease and screening for a number of cancers. The basic and essential difference is that if a patient with celiac disease symptoms initiates the gluten-free diet, the symptoms will resolve, and, what’s more important, the villi in the small intestine will re-grow. Celiac disease is not like cancer; it will not metastasize. There are certainly advantages is detecting it sooner rather than later and bringing it under control, but it’s not a race against the clock as it is with some cancers.

And as for the first question …

Should everyone with markers for celiac disease be on a gluten-free diet?

This is a hard question, no doubt about it. The gluten-free diet will almost certainly prevent the individual with markers for celiac disease from progressing to frank, symptomatic celiac disease. But if recommendations are followed, and this individual is diagnosed with celiac disease based on serologic screening and biopsies demonstrating changes in the villi lining the upper intestine, the gluten-free diet can be instituted and the individual will be restored to health. And that means not only the absence of symptoms, but also the absence of celiac markers from the blood.

In short, there should be no rush to put an asymptomatic person on a gluten-free diet.

The downside of the gluten-free diet

The question is, what do we consume instead of gluten? The usual substitute for wheat flour in food products is rice flour, and there are at least a couple of potential harms in swapping rice flour for wheat flour. One is that there is much less inherent flavor in foods made with rice flour (don’t get me wrong, I love rice, but it needs a good-tasting something served over it). So gluten-free products tend to have other stuff in them to enhance the flavor – most often sugar, but also fats and salt. Usually the gluten-free product will have more calories than the product it’s aiming to replace.

Another factor is that rice flour tends to contain traces of arsenic – not much, but enough so that if food products made with rice flour are a mainstay of your diet, you may be consuming too much arsenic. A 2014 study in Spain, reported in Consumer Reports in January, 2015, estimated that if a 165-pound man was on a diet in which rice-flour products regularly substituted for wheat-flour products, he would take in 247 micrograms of arsenic per week – about 10 times the maximum safe level. Is this cause for alarm? Probably not for most people, at least in the short term. In fact, fashionable ladies in past times used to take tiny amounts of arsenic because it was good for the complexion. We excrete arsenic extremely slowly, through the skin, hair, and fingernails, which (in the meantime) look terrific. So maybe the gluten-free diet will be attractive to girls seeking to be supermodels. But prolonged exposure even to low levels of arsenic can be harmful, and, on balance should be avoided.

“Gluten-free” has become one of those cheerful little phrases that I suspect manufacturers of food products attach to anything that they can think of in order to catch the attention of the health-conscious, whose numbers are legion. Of course, all the products that normally contain wheat flour – bread, pasta, cookies and crackers and muffins and bagels and and and … are now available in gluten-free versions. But one also sees all manner of products that would normally have no reason to contain gluten now being labelled as gluten-free – tomato sauce, salad dressing, potato chips, laundry detergent, makeup. “Gluten-free” has now, in the view of lots of people, become nothing more than a synonym for “healthy.” And, as such, it’s being employed by the marketing contingent in the same way that they use the word “green” whenever they mean to imply that whatever they’re pushing on us is energy efficient, environmentally sustainable, and morally admirable.

But how should the person with celiac disease go about following a gluten-free diet?

Ordinary common sense will steer him or her in the right direction, perhaps supplemented by the advice of a nutritionist. There are lots and lots of foods in the supermarket that are absolutely gluten free – the entire produce section, the fish counter, the meat aisle, the dairy department – none of those will have any gluten. Okay, maybe if you buy fish sticks that have already been breaded, or chicken pot pie, or pizza. But the celiac patient should not simply rely on the food products labelled gluten-free that have been prepared to look just like their non-gluten-free counterparts. More than anything else, it’s a matter of using (in the words of Miss Charlotte Truesdell, my 11th grade math teacher) the brains we were born with.

The “what do we do instead” factor

This applies not only to the gluten-free diet and to diet in general, but to many things we do in life. For example, my grandfather was advised by his wise physician to stop smoking. This was in Cuba (where I was born) and quite a long time ago, so it was perhaps an unusual recommendation. The old man was in the habit of lighting up as a reflex. Just to be doing something with his hands he would reach for a cigarillo and light up. The doctor told him to start carrying a walking stick, and if he had an impulse to fiddle with something, play with his walking stick. It seemed to work pretty well.

But what we do instead isn’t always quite so benign as playing with our walking sticks. The data in the USA these days is discouraging. When our fellow-citizens were advised to cut back on fats, what they ate instead was probably worse for their health than the fats they cut out. Consumption of carbohydrates and sugars has soared, from about a quarter of our total calories to more than a third, and in some groups, up to about 40%, with dire consequences for such diseases as Type 2 diabetes. Cut out sugary soft drinks? That’s a good start, but the data on artificially-sweetened soda pop is not cheerful. And I’ve noticed that when Alcoholics Anonymous meetings break up, a lot of the members light up as soon as they hit the sidewalk.

Fortunately, avoiding gluten, for those relatively few individuals who really must avoid gluten, doesn’t land us in a quandary. There are abundant other non-gluten carbohydrates, and the other food groups are, to adopt the chosen label, gluten-free.

Are there any possible options for celiac patients other than the gluten-free diet?

Not at present, but that doesn’t mean that the pharma outfits are sitting idle. One small biotech, ImmusanT, has completed Phase 1 studies of an agent that – if it proves effective – will permit persons with celiac disease to consume gluten-containing foods. The biotech has raised $12 million for Phase 2 proof-of-concept studies for its agent, which they have tentatively called NexVax2. GlaxoSmithKline and AbbVie are also in the hunt. So, even though celiac disease is relatively uncommon, if we go by a more-or-less 1% prevalence figure, that’s 3.5 million in the US alone, and plenty more elsewhere. Pharma is going to keep looking at ways to manage this disease, and, based on the great success in managing several other autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, I would expect progress.

* * * * * * *

In my last piece, I overlooked the FDA’s approval of Pfizer’s Ibrance (palbociclib), which happened on February 3, 2015, a couple of months ahead the expectations. This drug, an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4 & CDK6), is now approved to treat post-menopausal women with breast cancers that are estrogen-receptor responsive but not human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2) responsive. CDK4 and CDK6 are active in promoting cancer cell division, and inhibiting their action is thought to be a promising avenue to the treatment of several other cancers. This is just another sign of the ferment of activity in cancer research that is going on in the pharmaceutical industry.

And Novartis’s panobinostat (Farydak) got FDA approval on February 23rd as treatment for multiple myeloma, a blood plasma disease that affects about 20,000 Americans annually and has a fatality rate of about 50%. The drug blocks some enzymes (histone and non-histone deacytilase enzymes, HDACs and DACs), that can foster the growth of cancer cells, and in a clinical trial in combination with two other drugs, it doubled survival from about 5 to about 10 months in patients who had failed two previous trials. As I said earlier, this hardly looks like great data, especially when considered in the light of the severe side effects that panibinostat can cause. But, as with all cancer clinical trials, modest success in the most difficult patients may be a harbinger of more clear-cut successes to come.

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Corey
Guest
Corey
March 2, 2015 2:12 pm

And here is an interesting video that puts our wheat and sugar obsession into perspective in all the damage it is causing to our health. All of which is preventable.

Carb-Loaded: A Culture Dying to Eat

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2015/02/07/carb-loaded-diabetes.aspx

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pcolajoe
pcolajoe
March 2, 2015 2:15 pm

Grain Brain is written by a doctor. It was a best seller on the NY Times list. Anyone writing about gluten who has not read that book, is basically unaware of his subject. Research first, then write. I think many doctors would make the same points as in this article. But they also tend to speak without doing research first. What do you call the med student who graduates at the bottom of his class? Doctor.

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Eclectic Wealth
Guest
March 2, 2015 2:24 pm

this article makes it sound as if celiac is the primary issue, however as described in the study in the link below, Non-celiac Gluten sensitivity is a real issue. (h/t Marksdailyapple.com)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25701700
Here is the conclusion from the study:
CONCLUSIONS:

In a cross-over trial of subjects with suspected NCGS, the severity of overall symptoms increased significantly during 1 week of intake of small amounts of gluten, compared with placebo.

So…more evidence that Moderate Carb/High Healthy Fat Paleo should be the starting point for a healthy diet. PerfectHealthDiet.com is a great place to start for people interested in the science behind this…

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DrKSSMDPhD
March 2, 2015 2:39 pm

Non celiac gluten sensitivity is a garbage diagnosis not taken seriously by anyone in gastroenterology, and this risible paper in one of the worst journals in gastroenterology, using bogus methodology, in no way validates the concept or even attests to its existence. It is a conceit of the worried well.

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Edward Maddox
Edward Maddox
March 2, 2015 3:43 pm
Reply to  DrKSSMDPhD

Dr. KSS, those in gastroenterology are not necessarily geniuses and are not necessarily well educated in nutrition! Can you pooh pooh all those that find they cannot tolerate ordinary wheat based foodstuffs? Saying “garbage diagnosis” is very truly garbage. Shame on YOU!

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biotechlong (btl)
March 2, 2015 4:25 pm
Reply to  Edward Maddox

It is true that not all gastroenterologists are geniuses – but Dr. KSS has clearly proven he is a genius. Consider this thesis: Not all Edward Maddox’s are blithering idiots – but you clearly qualify for that characterization!

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David C.
Irregular
David C.
March 2, 2015 6:12 pm

Is name calling really necessary? In debate we call it an ad hominem attack.

biotechlong (btl)
March 2, 2015 7:29 pm

I generally agree with your “rules of debate,” David, and I assure you that it is my personal policy to refrain from engaging in ad hominem attacks. What you apparently perceived as an ad hominem attack (by me) was actually a spontaneous third-party defensive counterattack that comports with the principles of proportionality articulated in the Hague Convention. Henceforth, the attacking aggressor will simply be ignored (by me), but I am not sure how hundreds of other committed Dr. KSS allies may react.

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GUY P.
Member
GUY P.
March 8, 2015 12:20 pm
Reply to  DrKSSMDPhD

I have no judgement about the specific article that is characterized as garbage. It may be. However I am very surprised that a supposedly well-educated person such as a MD/PhD is making such generalized statement. This feels like anything, which has not been proven is to be characterized as bogus or non existent. If this were true innovation would not happen. Innovation in matter and thinking often thrives on exploring the unknown with an open mind and is not always immediately supported by scientifically proven methods. In medicine many persons and non-western cultures have benefited of natural methods of healing and have intelligently complemented the western chemicals based medicinal cutlure. The overwhelming practical evidence and testimonies given by persons about the fact that gluten play a larger role in human health than just celiac disease indicates that when there is smoke, there is most likeley a fire. A true scientist and MD/PhD would be intrigued and would want to investigate to find (the sometimes unexpected) evidence of the role that gluten is playing in human health and what can be done to improve it.
My own little experiment of leaving gluten more than 5 years ago has shown to me that the severe joint pains that I have had in my knees, hands and elbows for more than 20 years, disappeared within 6 months after leaving gluten from my diet and I have never looked back. How this works is a mystery for me, although many similar testimonies seem to point our that there may be a relationship between gluten and inflammatory effects.

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Patricia
March 8, 2015 2:07 pm
Reply to  GUY P.

Guy, I don’t think I’ve ever seen the problem better stated (medical science’s neglect of nutrition). 1000 likes.

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dcohn
Member
March 3, 2015 3:01 pm

The study is from ******,gov. You have to question the same people that allow our food sprayed with poison, (Monsanto comes to mind) made that document.

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David C.
Irregular
David C.
March 2, 2015 2:42 pm

There is a great deal of research not funded by the food industry, mostly in Europe, which actually fosters real food, which is double blind and from highly respectable researchers. (referred to in the previously mentioned books on wheat). Follow the money and you will see the scam of American food politics.

austin
austin
March 2, 2015 3:29 pm

Usually both sides of an argument have some merit.
I used to think I was an agnostic, but now I think I am a gnostic who knows very little.
But one thing to consider is risk or downside if you wish…hey this applies to investing too!
What is the downside of trying a low carb diet which would accommodate being gluten free? Maybe a bit more expensive, but if somebody tries it for a month or two, what is the risk? If someone is on meds for diabetes this would need to be watched in case of hypoglycemia, but in the absence of risks related to medications I can’t think of a serious risk in an otherwise healthy person. Take more leafy vegetables and nuts, you don’t need to eat 10 pounds of meat a day to make up the calories of the deleted carbs lol.
Then after a month or two see how you feel. Did you lose weight or not?
It won’t work for everyone, but what is the downside of trying?
Back in the 90s I took one Vioxx, just one, it was the first time I ever tried Vioxx. The next day my BP was 235/150 or something horrible like that, after Lopressor IV and observation in the ICU I was eventually sent home. My BP is usually 120/80 or less and has been normal ever since that event.
So, I think that the risk of trying a low carb diet for a month or two is less than that of trying a pill that one has never been exposed to, but I had a bad experience, maybe I am biased by experience 🙂

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Edward Maddox
Edward Maddox
March 2, 2015 3:31 pm

I am not a doctor but I do have extensive medical knowledge. I disagree with several things that Michael Jorrin said. I do not disagree with what he said about celiac disease, rather with his later branching out to talk about gluten free and what he presumes people do when choosing to go gluten free.
Gluten Free is no joke or fraud. It is made that way by some producers of foodstuffs but avoiding gluten has real health benefits. See the other member’s above comments telling of positive benefits they experienced.
To say that avoiding gluten will turn to rice as a substitute for wheat is rather presumptuous indeed. There are probably more than 5 different flours that are used instead of wheat flour in baking so rice is not THE substitute as implied. In wheat, the gluten is the binder that makes our bread hold together and it can be replaced by other binders such as xanthan gum or ground chia seeds.
To indicate that more sugar intake may result from going gluten free is absolutely outlandish since avoiding sugar often comes first when trying to have a truly healthy diet. The two most harmful things included in the SAD* and they are 1. Sugar and 2. Wheat. It is not necessary to consume sugar or the harmful chemical substitutes. If you are accustomed to sweetening your food or drink, you can use stevia or erythritol or xylitol. These plant derived sweeteners contribute no calories and do not support the growth of cancer and tumors as does sugar. Know that ALL forms of sugar are harmful. You do not solve sugar problems by going to honey or maple sugars or high fructose corn syrup. Sugar is sugar in those forms too and it is harmful.
Live long and prosper!
*Standard American Diet

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Carbon Bigfoot
Guest
Carbon Bigfoot
March 2, 2015 6:58 pm
Reply to  Edward Maddox

Having extensive medical knowledge does not qualify you to question the viewpoints advanced here by our commentators, unless you are willing to advance your CVA and work experience. Science ( and the world ) is riddled today with self-proclaimed experts, e.g.. AWG, including our POTUS.
Just because you have the knowledge you claim, doesn’t not allow to theorize the implications of that knowledge unless you worked in that field. Those of you that are not familiar with the Scientific Method cannot postulate, or interpret this information. Just because you matriculated and can read does not afford you that luxury. Sorry.

David C.
Irregular
David C.
March 3, 2015 3:08 pm
Reply to  Carbon Bigfoot

Wow, so no Ph.D/MD advanced degree, then you can’t speak about anything in that field. I understand your sentiment, as I was an educator for years and got sick of people whose only experience in education was going through school whenever they went, but then they dictated policy in education. Nonetheless, last I checked, the first amendment to the Constitution was still in effect. People can weigh others’ opinions whether the person was a scholar in the field or not. I remember when I first got into nutrition and trying to have a good diet. A local MD/surgeon stated that diet had nothing to do with health. This was the 1970’s and I knew the doctor didn’t know what he was talking about.

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dcohn
Member
March 3, 2015 3:13 pm
Reply to  Carbon Bigfoot

That is ridiculous statement that you need medical knowledge to have lived and seen things for yourself. This is the problem.

You NEED nothing to care for yourself. There are laws regarding giving advice and caring for others, agreed, but you need no scientific degree to decide what is good for your body.

On the contrary I say that most “Scientific Evidence” today is so hard to determine whether it is fact or fiction that people do not know where to turn. There are 90 million different scientific documents and how many are different from each other.

Brainwashed. Everyone is brainwashed by the media. Doctors are taught to be like Gods and have their words be a resounding FACT. Wake up and question everything.

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Patricia
March 8, 2015 2:01 pm
Reply to  Carbon Bigfoot

Bigfoot, “[ed. note: Michael Jorrin, who I like to call “Doc Gumshoe,” is a medical writer (not a doctor) who shares his thoughts with our readers a couple times a month…]” – this note prefaces all of Doc’s articles. I would be interested in his “CVA and work experience”, I’m fairly new to Gumshoe so if he’s disclosed it before I’m unaware.

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Jonny
Guest
Jonny
March 22, 2015 4:12 am
Reply to  Carbon Bigfoot

You must be the resident expert on all subject matter and chief moderator. Judging from many of your comments on this site you are quite a “self-proclaimed expert yourself. Not sure what ‘made up’ qualifications you imagine you possess but it is quite obvious most of your knowledge and expertise is rooted in conjecture, hyperbole and pseudo-intellectualism.

vivian lewis
March 2, 2015 3:49 pm

You don’t have to be Irish to suffer from gluten intolerance. I have an ITALIAN niece by marriage with some Slovenian ancestry but mainly Italian and she cannot eat anything with wheat in it, like pasta, the foundation stone of all Italian food.
It was diagnosed when she was about 6 or 7 in Florence where her family then lived. This is a serious matter for Valeria and incidentally also for her relatives. I am always working up exciting dishes to feed her, like gluten-free pasta and gluten-free fruitcake. It is a lot easier now than it was a couple of decades ago.
I also know lots of people who adopt a sometimes gluten-free diet our of faddishness. One of our British friends, a famous author who has to remain nameless, insists on gluten free food but guzzles beer (which is full of gluten) rather than wine or cider to identify with his humble Yorkshire roots. But for Valeria this is a real issue.
Her husband, my nephew the cop, is vegan which adds to the complexities. But veganism is voluntary.

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Illuminati Investments
Irregular
Illuminati Investments
March 2, 2015 3:52 pm

Whoever invents a pill to treat non-Celiac gluten sensitivity is going to become a billionaire, unless the fad is over by then. Personally, I think this could be accomplished with a placebo, but if people are really seeing health benefits by switching to gluten free, then more power to them.

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Teresan
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Teresan
March 2, 2015 4:38 pm

I’m off Gluten and was aware of the rice arsenic conection. Brown rice and brown rice syrup are especially high in arsenic. Corn does not have gluten but something else that is very similar so I am easy on this, I especially stay away fron any products containing soy. This high profit crop will grow breasts on men because of phyto estrogens (soy Milk) and and has a harmful effect on the development of infants fed soy formula. It especially debilitating to thyroid hormone production. I see women buying tofu because they think it will help them lose weight but the opposite is true beause of this. I tend to use potoatoes as my carb even though it is high on the glycemic index, over rice or corn products
Staying off gluten, soy, and also sugar and dairy isn’t easy but I feel better and have virtually no health problems.

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Rod
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Rod
March 2, 2015 4:55 pm

FODMAP digestion issues cause a lot of problems (see Wikipedia). Wheat is a major dietary contributor of FODMAPs, so a relatively easy way to reduce FODMAP intake is to cut down on wheat intake by moving towards the now readily-available gluten-free options. If that helps, consider some of the other FODMAP sources.

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canonfodder
canonfodder
March 7, 2015 8:12 pm
Reply to  Rod

Maybe more would like your comment if they knew what FODMAP means. WIKIPEDIA explains: “The term FODMAP is an acronym, deriving from “Fermentable, Oligo-, Di-, Mono-saccharides And Polyols.”” FODMAPs are short chain carbohydrates. Many people are better off avoiding those carbohydrates.

Perhaps the understanding of information would be a bit better if we did not depend on acronyms. I realize that acronyms shorten what we have to type or read, but text is better if the whole thing is first used and then the acronym applied as needed further on.

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Carbon Bigfoot
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Carbon Bigfoot
March 2, 2015 6:43 pm

This is fun. Realizing that in my earlier childhood I was happy I got any food at all. Then as our fortunes changed and I went into puberty, I inhale all kinds of food ( and the containers they came in ) because I had the metabolism to process it. I left freshman year of HS as 5′-4″ and began sophomore in the fall at 5′-10″.
Without boring you with all the diets and medical maladies I faced in my life, including Type II diabetes, which I deal with now, the only problem this country needs to deal with is PORTION CONTROL. How many of you fat bastards eat only one slice of pizza? Or one 8oz. glass of beer ( a week ). Weight Watchers is the only program that works period.

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Joan M
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Joan M
March 2, 2015 6:45 pm

Here’s a fascinating take on gluten sensitivity from Mother Jones. It postulates that the health problems some people are having from eating wheat may have more to do with the baking methods, and newer quick-rising varieties of wheat. If you’ve ever baked bread, you let it rise for hours, not the 5 minutes or less in modern commercial bakeries. Worth a read: http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2015/02/bread-gluten-rising-yeast-health-problem and http://www.motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2014/02/toms-kitchen-100-whole-wheat-bread-doesnt-suck-and-pretty-easy

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Andrea
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Andrea
March 2, 2015 9:49 pm

Nobody mentoned genetically modified wheat which is heavily sprayed with glyphosate (Roundup). I was tested for Celiac a number of years ago when I started having gastro trouble. I tested negative. About a year and a half ago and before that I was poisoned by lawn chemicals which contained glyphosate as well as others. One of the outcomes was to make me more sensitive to these chemicals. Glyphosate is being sprayed on many crops as well as wheat. It can be found anywhere they are GMOs. I’m now on a gluten free diet and also watch that I don’t eat anything else that’s been sprayed. A gluten free diet straightened most of it out and of course sstaying away from anything else that’s been sprayed (GMO). It looks to me like this is part of the reason for the gluten free craze. There was an article on Mercola.com mentioning this.

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meemike
meemike
March 2, 2015 11:29 pm

These comments illustrate well the amazing efficacy of the placebo.

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bj
Member
March 3, 2015 12:41 am

Interesting article that’s MOSTLY over my head!!!
Dynamic Adaptation of Nutrient Utilization in Humans
Nutrient Utilization in Humans. Nature Education 3(9):8
Food in, energy out? It’s not as simple as that. How do cells meet our bodies’ ever changing energy needs?
http://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/dynamic-adaptation-of-nutrient-utilization-in-humans-14232807

Judy
Member
Judy
March 3, 2015 4:49 pm

There is so much more the having Celiac’s or not. My son was tested for Celiac’s and came back negative. He suffered from anxiety, terrible fatigue and joint pain. He would break out in horrible rashes. I finally sent him to an acupuncturist. When treatments didn’t seem to help more then two days, he was tested for Lymes Disease, negative. Then he was asked to take a simple test if no sugar and no gluten for three days. On the fourth day he had pancakes and syrup. He said he felt like he was going to die. Although he does not have Celiac’s, he is gluten intolerant. A simple thing like soy sauce triggers an auto immune response that attacks his muscles and joints.

There are many intolerances with gluten and there is no one test that can pin point each one of them.

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Donald Bright
March 4, 2015 12:25 pm

Sugar is a very small part of my diet but i love my bread (only brown) Rye bread, and mixed grain bread. I have had stomach problems with a lot of bloating for the past 3 years and an Endoscopy showed i had an inflamed stomach lining. It comes and goes with the pills i take but is very unpleasant when i have it. Now i am not about to ask you for a medical diagnosis but after reading this very informative article i have two questions to ask. 1 – is there a simple medical test i can take that will show if i am gluten intolerant. 2 – As i love my brown bread so much is there any kind of gluten free bread that i could change to if need be. I could go without sugar completely if need be but my brown bread is a beast of another nature.

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Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe
March 5, 2015 8:52 am

Michael wanted to be more thorough in his response to some of these comments, so he posted a follow-up here.

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Mary Thorpe
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Mary Thorpe
March 10, 2015 12:13 am

In response to Doc Gumshoe’s article, and to Dr. KSS who says that everything in it and the followup are 100% accurate, I would like to clarify a few points. My background includes being gluten free since 1998. My symptoms are many and varied and but the most problematic are migraine and inflammation in general (joint, muscle and bladder) and susceptibility to respiratory infections. I am one of those self diagnosed as gluten intolerant because my physician was not informed about it 17 years ago. I worked at the Center for Celiac Research at UMB and am one of the coauthors of the 2003 Archives of Medicine article that found a prevalence of 1:133 in the US. I was glad to see this estimate was closely corroborated by the NHANES study.

1) Re: celiac disease and the gf diet: “this diet confers no benefit whatsoever on persons who do not have this condition – in fact, it is likely to bring significant and specific harms.” This is a statement the author may wish to withdraw. Non-celiac gluten sensitivity has now finally been recognized as a condition apart from celiac disease, involving only innate immune mechanisms while celiac disease is characterized by both innate and adaptive processes. Diagnostic tests have not yet been developed to distinguish NCGS but it is a new area of research. In addition, some people have IgE mediated allergy to gluten or other molecules found in wheat. Others have talked about the lack of harms from a gf diet, depending on how it is practiced. Quite the contrary to being harmful, a diet from the perimeter of the store is far healthier than one heavy on processed foods. Going gluten free made me realize that I didn’t need all that unhealthful food anyway and was better off without it. My gf diet is far healthier than my former diet.

2) “All had blood tests for IgA and tTG” and “ If the marker is IgA / tTG in blood samples.” and ” The laboratory evidence is the presence of IgA and tTG in blood samples.” This is quite fuzzy. To be more clear, the usual blood test for celiac disease is IgA anti-tTG . In case of a negative result, total IgA must also be tested as some people are IgA deficient (2-3 % of celiacs). The author didn’t mention the DGP test which tests for IgG against deamidated gluten peptides and thus skirts the limitation of the IgA tTG. It is also more accurate in young children.

3) “Who should be screened for celiac disease?” IMHO, people who have unexplained and unsolved prolonged troublesome symptoms should be tested because the symptoms of celiac disease and non-celiac gluten intolerance are so varied and unpredictable. First serological tests should be done and then the gluten free diet can be tried. What does one have to lose by giving it a try? Diarrhea is present only 50% of the time. In fact, 50% of blood relatives diagnosed on the basis of serology reported no symptoms. Part of my job at CFCR involved informing study participants of positive test results. I asked those who reported no symptoms to call back in 6 months to report if they noticed any difference. Unfortunately, I didn’t stay there long enough to make a study of that. Some people have been diagnosed only because of osteoporosis, or anemia, or peripheral neuropathy, and in at least a couple of cases I know of, unfortunately, intestinal lymphoma. 5% of migraine sufferers, 5% of those with peripheral neuropathy, up to 6% of those with epilepsy, also Schizophrenia, depression, anxiety disorders, ataxia have also been linked to gluten Note the abundance of neurological manifestations, often without intestinal symptoms.

4) “why a genetic disposition to celiac disease has persisted in our species.” U. Wisc anthropologist John Hawks speculates “as populations grew more dense after the rise of agriculture, infectious diseases likely became a more serious issue, which led to a situation where the positive effects of a strong immune system outweigh any negative effects.”

5) “Nor is gluten conceivably toxic.” That is a matter for debate. Some researchers do refer to it as toxic. Gliadin peptides open tight junctions in everyone. In people with celiac disease, those tight junctions stay open longer which is responsible for some of the symptoms of the disease due to intestinal permeability- food allergies, for instance are very common. I consider gluten toxic because it causes inflammation in my body.

Other than those issues I had with your article, I thank you for writing it and bringing more attention to this complex health issue which is surrounded by a lot of misunderstanding.

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