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Date: | Sun, 10 Jan 1999 12:44:58 EST |
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<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>>
I received over 100 E-Mail responses and was asked repeatedly to summarize my
responses. Far too many to paraphrase. My question asked something like:
"Since I ate vast amounts of gluten before diagnosis, how could a few crumbs
hurt me now?" Here's what you answered:
1. Before diagnosis, celiacs go all their life eating lots of wheat (pastas,
bread, etc.) up to the 70's with stomach problems they learned to live with.
2. Once your bowel heals, small amounts of gluten become upsetting whereas
before diagnosis they were inconsequential. 3. I would be playing around
with cancer if I ingested even small mounts of gluten now. Most celiacs I
heard from were diagnosed not as children but as mature adults and most had
IBS or anemia which they had learned to live with until something like a
virus, childbirth, illness or surgery triggered CD and they were fortunate
enough to get diagnosed.
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