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Someone wrote me an email that made it clear to me that my comments
were confused with other people's comments. Here is mine, in response
to:
http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-gluten7-2008jul07,0,6367449.story
As someone with celiac disease who has spent the last five years
trying to educate the general public about the need for gluten-free
foods, the title of an article in Sunday’s health and fitness section
caught my eye. It read, "Going Gluten-Free: Even those with no medical
need are modifying their diets. But is it healthy?" The article reads
"We see some self diagnosers who have read about celiac disease on the
Internet or heard about it from a friend and have made a kind-of
self-diagnosis. This can cause unnecessary worry, dietary
restrictions, and expense." In the last paragraph "gluten-free" is
referred to as a quirky health kick. "If you just google the silly
thing, there's all sorts of dieticians and medical professionals
against it. They're just not organized yet to [band together and] say,
'You know what? This is ridiculous.'”
The article targets folks who go on the gluten-free diet for no
apparent reason. The message she sends, however, negatively affects
me, and my ability to eat safely outside of my home. If I eat at a
restaurant and my meal is not “gluten-free” I get a whopping migraine
and severe intestinal cramps within 20 minutes. I won’t tell you what
the rest of the night involves and hopefully it won’t involve an IV in
the ER. Reactions among the gluten intolerant range in severity and
others might react differently. Think about my dilemma. Usually my
server will have no idea what gluten is, so I have to explain that I
cannot eat wheat, rye, or barley, and that these are in a lot of
sauces and flavoring agents. The routine gets old, but every time I
must explain that I’ll get very, very sick if my food is contaminated
with these ingredients. This time is different, however. I no sooner
say, “I need my food to be gluten-free,” and he replies, okay, yeah, I
know what gluten is – I just read an article in the paper about going
gluten-free. Just when I want to welcome the opportunity to sit back
and retire the old song and dance, I must work even harder to convey
my message. Now I have to dispel this myth that is growing among the
general public that I am part of some “quirky” group of
hypochondriacs, or that I am taking a ride on the gluten-free
bandwagon.
American doctors have managed to diagnose 3% of people with celiac
disease. It is 97% undiagnosed. Where are all of those celiacs? One
out of every 133 people has celiac disease, but at least one out of
every 20 people has an adverse reaction to wheat and related grains.
Are these people “self-diagnosers?” just because they have learned
that going gluten-free has improved their health? Too many people
raise a brow when I say that I have celiac disease, including medical
doctors. It is hereditary, so we have had several family members
tested. My son’s specialist asked me, “but are you biopsy diagnosed?”
Translation, “did you qualify as one of three percent of celiacs in
the country?” Yes. My father’s doctor said, “you don’t need a test for
celiac disease – you are 60 years old. If you had it you would know,
and you’ll never follow that diet anyway.” He wouldn’t test him. An
article that cries, “the gluten-free diet may not be healthy” adds
fuel to this fire.
Celiac disease may be triggered at any age, and it is twice as common
as Crohn’s, ulcerative colitis and cystic fibrosis combined.
Untreated, it can lead to infertility/multiple miscarriages, premature
births, reduced bone density, neurological disorders, malignancies,
thyroid disease, diabetes, and/or autoimmune liver disease. Once the
gluten-free diet has been established patients may feel better within
days. If too much damage has been done, a full recovery may not be
possible. A gluten-free diet will interfere with the ability to make
an accurate diagnosis, so the author sends one good message – do not
start the diet until after you have been tested for celiac disease.
But is it healthy? Make no mistake. The gluten-free diet is healthy.
Look at a typical list of gluten-containing items: cookies, cake,
pastries, cereal, soy sauce, emulsifiers, thickeners, pasta and beer.
You cannot tell me that cutting these things out of my diet is going
to make me unhealthy. One might argue that when you merely find a
gluten-free replacement for all of the items listed above, and call
that your “gluten-free diet”, vitamin deficiencies are inevitable.
More often than not, however, people who abide by a gluten-free diet
find themselves in health food stores shopping for organic and whole
foods. I eat more fruits and vegetables now than I ever have. This is
because the only treatment for celiac disease is a strict, lifelong
gluten-free diet.
This author is barking up the wrong tree. If she really aims to better
the health of her readers she should try this approach: The American
diet. Even those who are obese and malnourished stay on it. But is it
healthy?
Here is a message worth banding together about: There are several
routine tests for celiac disease, yet it takes an average of 11 years
for a symptomatic patient to be diagnosed. That, my friends, is
ridiculous.
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