<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>> Scott Adams wrote: >DON WROTE: >>This was one of your first products after you opened the mall in January >>1999. This was before the study noted above was published in February 1999. >>But after the Canadian study showing distress. A summary of the Canadian >>study was published on the front page of the Spring 1995 issue of the >>Celiac News from the Canadian Celiac Association. I posted it to the list >>in August 1995, and several times afterwards. >> >>You state "study after study." How many is this? > >SCOTT RESPONDS: > >Correct me if I am wrong as I am going from memory, but didn't that study >deal with non-Codex wheat starch? If so, it obviously has not bearing on >this issue. All the CCA newsletter had was: "As evidence, Dr. Seidman referred to a study of 25 adults who had never ingested wheat starch. The study introduced wheat starch into their diet. Half of the group were forced to remove themselves from the study due to adverse symptoms." That study appears to be similar to this one: Chartrand LJ; Russo PA; Duhaime AG; Seidman EG. Wheat starch intolerance in patients with celiac disease. J Am Diet Assoc, 97(6):612-8 1997 Ju.n That Graeme from New Zealand posted to this list on April 29th. You can see it in full in the archives at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/CGI/wa.exe?A2=ind0104e&L=celiac&F=&S=&P=2386 >Here are a few studies that I found quickly doing an Internet search (the >Canadian one was not found, please let me know where it was published): But all, except one of them, are from after you started carrying this product at your site. The one from before is this one, which you posted no abstract for. How do you know what it is about? TITLE: Wheat deficient in gliadins: promising tool for treatment of coeliac disease M Frisoni, GR Corazza, D Lafiandra, E De Ambrogio, C Filipponi, F Bonvicini, E Borasio, E Porceddu, and G Gasbarrini Gut 1995 36: 375-378 Universita di Bologna, Italy I just checked Medline. The abstract for this one has nothing to do with the current debate. It is: The toxicity of two varieties of bread wheat, one poor in alpha and beta gliadins and the other poor in alpha, beta, gamma, and omega gliadins, has been tested. The peptic-tryptic digest of these wheats was assessed using coeliac mucosa in an in vitro organ culture system. A significantly lower toxicity was found in respect of bread wheat containing all gliadin fractions. These results suggest new opportunities for the treatment of coeliac disease. Don.