<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hidden Gluten~Hidden Gluten~Hidden Gluten~Hidden Gluten~Hidden Gluten~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Whenever a product or ingredient is identified as a possible source of gluten-contamination it will be highlighted in this section. Some products contain a minute amount of gluten and may not have a noticeable physical affect, but may cause internal damage. NO GLUTEN is the ActionLine's goal. Medical research has established one standard for damage to the gut, but it is still unknown how much gluten or if repeated exposure to small amounts of gluten will increase a celiacs' chance of certain cancers or cause subtle changes, such as lassitude and depression. Nebulous terms must be researched until a satisfactory answer is obtained that the item is free of any toxic protein. When those terms are found on a label, we must routinely verify that it has not changed. If adequate information is obtained and fellow celiacs do not report any adverse reactions, those products should not be left out of your diet. Some celiacs limit labels with nebulous terms to only a few products, in order to reduce the amount of time spent on routine verification. When in doubt leave it out, is the best course of action. Gluten can be added to a product as an ingredient, through cross contamination, or as a result of the manufacturing process. When all gluten is kept out of a celiac's diet, the best quality of life is enjoyed. Each person must determine their preferred life style and how careful they will be in avoiding hidden toxic proteins. 1. Kellogg Corn Pops are no longer produced on dedicated equipment. Any box with a sale by date of Feb. 97 or later will have the potential for cross contamination. Kellogg’s phone number is (800) 962-0052. 2. Bugles now have wheat listed, in bold letters, as the last ingredients on the original flavor. 3. Milk lowering cholesterol is not for celiacs: A New No-Fat, No- Cholesterol Milk that can help lower cholesterol was unveiled at Washington, D.C. Press Conference, on August 8. This milk will have limited initial availability. It is expected to cost 20 percent more than regular milk. One of the initial markets this fall will be California. The milk is the result of two inventions: * Oatrim, a fiber-rich, all-natural fat replacer developed by NCAUR made from oats; and * Golden Jersey's proprietary, super-skimming process, that create fat-free, cholesterol-free milk.