Gluten-Free Diet In Potential Celiac Disease Patients
Main Category: GastroIntestinal / GastroenterologyAlso Included In: Immune System / Vaccines; Nutrition / Diet
Article Date: 17 Dec 2010 - 1:00 PDT
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Findings from a new study of 141 adults add to an ongoing medical debate over which patients with symptoms of celiac disease should go on a gluten-free diet. Published in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research, the study concludes that people currently diagnosed as "potential" celiac disease patients and not advised to follow a gluten-free diet may not be "potential" patients at all. Rather, the scientists found that these patients have the same distinctive metabolic fingerprint as patients with full-blown disease who do benefit from gluten-free diets.
In the study, Ivano Bertini and colleagues explain that celiac disease is an autoimmune digestive disorder characterized by the inability to digest a protein called gliadin, a component of gluten, which is found in wheat, rye, and barley. The condition causes diarrhea, bloating, and other symptoms in over 3 million people in the United States alone. Treatment is avoidance of foods containing gluten. But the disease is often undiagnosed or misdiagnosed. Definitive diagnosis involves biopsy of the small intestine, showing tissue damage. People with a positive blood test for the condition but no positive biopsy usually are diagnosed as "potential" celiac patients and may or may not be advised to follow a gluten-free diet.
The scientists used magnetic resonance metabolic profiling to analyze the biochemical markers in the blood and urine of 61 patients with celiac disease, 29 with potential celiac disease, and 51 healthy people. They found that those with potential disease largely shared the same profile as those with the confirmed disease and that the biochemical markers in both groups differed significantly from those of the healthy individuals. "Our results demonstrate that metabolic alterations may precede the development of small intestinal villous atrophy and provide a further rationale for early institution of gluten-free diet in patients with potential celiac disease, as recently suggested by prospective clinical studies," the scientists conclude.
Notes:
The authors acknowledge funding from Boehringer Ingelheim Italy.
Article: "Are patients with potential celiac disease really potential? The answer of metabonomics"
Source:
Michael Bernstein
American Chemical Society
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23 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/211738.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/211738.php.
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Reactions to Gluten
posted by Steve W on 20 Jan 2011 at 8:16 amThis article is very welcome.
For many years I have been advocating that the so called "Gold Standard" for diagnosing Coeliac Disease is flawed! This work seems to support my opinion.
The human body is not only very complex but cannot be replicated in a laboratory. So, I consider that if your body is telling you there is something very wrong by providing signals, such as diarrhoea, then it stops, when you stop eating gluten, for me that is more convincing than what a test or a doctor's opinion says!
I am not medically qualified, but I am a qualified Engineer so my logic will not be easily overpowered or swayed by an opinion! I deal with facts! Fact: 'body stops hurting by not eating gluten', then 'don't eat gluten'! ~ Simple!
I sometimes think the medical professionals get too bogged down with science! Keep it simple and help the people who are suffering with CD. It took the medical professionals over 15 years to diagnose me, and boy did I suffer along the way. In fact it almost killed me! Please, please do away with the "Gold Standard" nonsense! Keep it simple!
Thanks for a great website! You people are superb. Keep up the good work so that ordinary non-medical people like myself can see what is really happening behind the scenes! Well done to you all & thanks!
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