I previously wrote an article called “Is Gluten Sensitivity Real” which critiqued a spate of news reports suggesting that nonceliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS) doesn’t exist. These news stories referred to a study indicating that some people who believed they were reacting to gluten were actually reacting to a class of poorly absorbed carbohydrates (which include wheat, among many other foods) called FODMAPs.
You can read the full article above for details, but the takeaway was that the study those stories were based on in no way disproved the existence of NCGS, nor did it overturn the large body of evidence that links it to a variety of health problems ranging from type 1 diabetes, to allergies, to schizophrenia, to autism spectrum disorders. There is little doubt among those who are familiar with the scientific literature that NCGS is a real condition.
Yet despite this, we continue to see headlines in the media like this:
- Time for Some Grains of Truth About Gluten
- Eat More Gluten: The Diet Fad Must Die
- Why We’re Wasting Billions on Gluten-Free Food
These stories—and many other like them—argue that nonceliac gluten intolerance is rare, and that people who eliminate gluten from their diet are just silly fad followers. In this article, however, I’m going to present three reasons why NCGS is not only a bonafide condition, but may in fact be a much more serious problem than celiac disease.
#1: Celiac Disease Is Far Easier to Diagnose Than NCGS
According to some estimates, for every diagnosed case of celiac disease (CD), there are 6.4 undiagnosed cases that remain undiagnosed—the majority of which are atypical or “silent” forms with no damage to the gut. (1) This silent form of CD is far from harmless; it is associated with a nearly fourfold increase in the risk of death. (2)
I believe that patients with NCGS are even more likely than patients with CD to go undiagnosed. Most gastroenterologists today know how to screen for celiac disease. They will typically test for antibodies to antibodies to alpha gliadin, transglutaminase-2, deamidated gliadin, and endomysium, and if positive do a biopsy to determine if tissue damage is present.
However, we now know that people can (and do) react to several other components of wheat above and beyond alpha gliadin, the component that is implicated in CD. These include other epitopes of gliadin (beta, gamma, omega), glutenin, wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), gluteomorphin, and deamidated gliadin. What’s more, people can react to other types of tissue transglutaminase, including type 3—primarily found in the skin—and type 6—primarily found in the brain. (3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
Why the “gluten intolerance haters” are wrong.#gluten #glutenintolerance
So, imagine a scenario where the patient is reacting to deamidated gliadin, glutenin, gluteomorphin, and either transglutaminase-3 or -6, but not reacting to alpha gliadin or transglutaminase-2—which are the antibodies used to screen for CD by most doctors. They will remain undiagnosed, and may continue to eat gluten for the rest of their lives, putting themselves at serious risk for autoimmune and other diseases.
This is not a hypothetical situation. In fact, I see cases like this all the time in my practice. Here is a screenshot from a recent test I ran on a patient. I use a much more thorough test for wheat and gluten intolerance called Array 3 from Cyrex Laboratories. Unlike other tests, it measures antibodies not only to alpha gliadin and transglutaminase-2, but also many of the other components of the wheat protein I mentioned above, as well as transglutaminase-3 and 6.
This patient is not reacting to alpha gliadin or transglutaminase-2. Had they been tested by their conventional doctor, they would have been told that they do not have celiac disease or gluten intolerance.
However, as you can see, she is reacting quite significantly to several different components of wheat, including:
- Native and deamidated gliadin and gluteomorphin, which are compounds produced during the digestion of wheat.
- Glutenin, which is the other major fraction of the wheat protein, along with gliadin.
- Gliadin-transglutaminase complex, which indicates that the patient is experiencing an autoimmune reaction to wheat.
- Transglutaminase-3, which is expressed primarily in the skin, and to a lesser extent in the brain and placenta.
- Transglutaminase-6, which is expressed in the brain and nervous system.
When this patient consumes wheat or other gluten-containing foods, she may not experience the classic digestive symptoms associated with CD or NCGS, because she is not producing antibodies to transglutaminase-2 (which is mostly expressed in the gut). Instead, her intolerance of wheat could manifest in skin conditions like eczema or psoriasis, and in neurological or brain-related conditions like depression, peripheral neuropathy, or ADHD. (9, 10)
Worst of all, if this patient had not had this test, and had continued to eat wheat and gluten for the rest of her life, it’s likely that she would have been at much higher risk for the long list of serious conditions that are associated with gluten intolerance, such as multiple sclerosis, ataxia, diabetes, and even Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease). (11, 12, 13, 14)
Unfortunately, this patient is not the exception—she is the rule. I’ve seen so many test results just like this, where the patient would have been misdiagnosed as not having gluten intolerance had they gone to a conventional doctor.
This presents another obvious problem, of course: if very few health care providers are doing the correct testing for gluten intolerance (like the panel from Cyrex above), then how can we possibly know what the true prevalence of NCGS is? We can’t—but given everything I’ve written above, we can certainly suspect that it’s much higher than currently believed.
According to Cyrex Labs, 1 in 4 people that take the Array 3 panel test positive for some form of wheat or gluten intolerance. Granted, this is not a representative sample, since most people that take the Cyrex panel are dealing with chronic illness of some kind.
Even with the limitations of current testing, however, some researchers have speculated that NCGS may affect as many as 1 in 10 people. (15) I suspect this is accurate, if not conservative.
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#2: Current Cultural Attitudes toward NCGS Mean More People Will Remain Undiagnosed
And for reasons that I do not fully understand, they do so with an almost religious fervor.
The “gluten intolerance haters” seemed to emerge in force after a paper published by Gibson et al. in 2013 made the rounds in the media. This study found that a group of patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) were not sensitive to gluten, but instead were reacting to a group of poorly absorbed carbohydrates called FODMAPs. (16) Aside from the fact that this study did not in any way disprove the existence of NCGS, from a practical perspective the study findings would not have changed the behavior of most people with IBS who identified as being gluten intolerant, since wheat and many other gluten-containing grains are FODMAPs and should thus be avoided by these patients.
More importantly, however, in the last two years since the Gibson paper new studies have been published that directly contradict Gibson’s findings and strongly suggest that patients with IBS do, in fact, react adversely to gluten—and not just FODMAPs.
For example, a new double-blind, randomized trial out of Iran was specifically designed to determine whether a group of IBS patients reacted to gluten specifically, or simply improved for other reasons on a gluten-free diet. (17) Here’s how it worked:
- 80 patients followed an “almost-gluten-free” diet (dietary compliance was considered optimal if consumption of gluten was below 100 mg/day, the equivalent of roughly 1/8 tsp of wheat four).
- After six weeks, the 72 patients that complied with the diet and experienced significant improvement were then randomized into two groups: Group A, and Group B.
- Group A (35 patients) was given a 100 g packet containing a gluten meal (free of FODMAPs). Group B (37 patients) was given a placebo packet (100 g) containing rice flour, corn starch, and glucose.
- Patients in both groups consumed the powders for six weeks, while both groups continued on gluten-free diets.
After six weeks of the diet symptoms were controlled in only 26% of the gluten group, compared with 84% of the placebo group. In the gluten-containing group, all symptoms—especially bloating and abdominal pain—increased significantly one week after starting the gluten.
The authors point out that it is important to properly identify gluten intolerance and distinguish it from FODMAP intolerance because some recent research suggests that long-term low FODMAP diets may have adverse effects on the gut microbiome. One study found that a low FODMAP diet compared with a habitual diet reduced the proportion and concentration of Bifidobacteria, one of the most beneficial species of bacteria in the colon. (18) (Authors note: I will be exploring this issue in more detail in a future article.)
But I would add another equally serious consequence of misdiagnosing gluten intolerance as FODMAP intolerance, which is the increase in risk for numerous and sometimes serious diseases that occurs when someone with NCGS continues to consume gluten.
#3: Many Doctors and Patients Aren’t Serious Enough about NCGS Treatment
This last point is a natural consequence of the first two. If detecting NCGS in conventional medical settings is unlikely, and there is a strong cultural backlash against it, where does that leave the millions of people that are likely suffering from NCGS without even knowing it?
Even if they do suspect that they are gluten intolerant, they might be dissuaded from pursuing a strict gluten-free diet by their friends, social media contacts, or even their doctor, all of whom are likely uninformed on this subject and do not understand the deficiencies in conventional testing or the complexity of the topic.
Based on the research I’ve reviewed in this article, and several others I linked to here, we should be more aggressive—not less—in diagnosing and treating gluten intolerance.
We need greater access to test panels like Cyrex Labs Array 3, which is the only commercial test outside of a research setting that screens for antibodies to many of the proteomes in wheat, instead of just testing for alpha gliadin. We need better training for doctors on how to recognize the myriad of symptoms and conditions associated with gluten intolerance, so they don’t make the common mistake of assuming that the patient isn’t gluten intolerant if they don’t have digestive problems. And we need some prominent journalists to educate themselves, step forward, and take responsibility for treating this as the serious, potentially life-threatening problem that it is.
Even without access to tests like Array 3, an elimination/provocation trial where gluten is removed completely from the diet for 60 days and then reintroduced is still considered to be an accurate method of assessing gluten intolerance. Doctors should be much more proactive about recommending this to patients, and despite the claims of some mainstream nutritionists and dietitians to the contrary, there is no risk to removing gluten from the diet. (19) If anything, people on a gluten-free diet are more likely to increase their intake of essential nutrients, especially if they replace breads and other flour products with whole foods (rather than with gluten-free flour alternatives).
This may explain why up to 30 percent of CD patients continue to have symptoms or clinical signs after adopting a gluten-free diet. (21) For this reason, I recommend a completely grain- and dairy-free diet during the gluten challenge period.
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Thank you for your articles. They have given me more to think about. I have food sensitivities and they literally control my life. Over time I have eliminated most foods including dairy, red meat, soda, most nuts and seeds, and all grains other than white rice. I still have digestive pain most of the time, it’s just a matter of how severe it is from day to day. I was diagnosed with IBS several years ago. I haven’t found any treatment that helps much other than prescription drugs that leave me overly tired and unable to concentrate. Most people are understanding of the dietary restrictions. My family is understanding but gets tired of me never feeling well.
@Lee Chamberlain: Are you sick more than most people as well as your food issues? You might want to be tested for immune deficiencies. Doctors do not test for selective immune deficiencies when they should. I was recently diagnosed with IgG-1 subclass deficiency and was astonished to learn how many of my other symptoms including my severe IBS are associated with immune deficiencies. You can have auto-immune symptoms without a full blown auto-immune disease when you are in a state of immune dysregulation. Also, 1) save up the $400 and have a complete stool analysis if you haven’t done that; 2) get your thyroid checked (www.stopthethyroidmadness.com is a great resource for finding a doctor who knows how to truly test your thyroid instead of just relying on a TSH test when can vary wildly over the course of the day); 3) get tested for bacterial infection of the intestines like h. pylori and 4) if you have taken antibiotics in the last year or two consider a yeast protocol as yeast overgrowth can cause all kinds of hypersensitivity (and your body not killing yeast effectively can be part of a mild immune deficiency as it is for me). Something is underneath the food sensitivity. Keep fighting the fight to find the cause. It’s exhausting but well worth it.
Thank you so much for publishing this follow up to the research on FODMAPs that seemed to validate that gluten sensitivity wasn’t real. I was initially excited by the FODMAP research because it finally explained a lot of the digestive issues I was experiencing because of the fructans, extra fructose, and polyols many foods broke down into –which I had not ever been able to understand or treat effectively. But just as I was feeling convinced about the FODMAPs being my only problem, I realized that many of my symptoms to eating gluten are completely NON-DIGESTIVE: that is, when I eat or drink something with gluten in it, I devolve very quickly into a state of chronic fatigue, sleeping 13 hours, then waking up and stumbling around as if I am still asleep, all the while yawning over and over again until tears are streaming down my face. So, guess what–I’m still sensitive to gluten, even though I didn’t test for having celiac disease. But I wonder if I would test positively on the Cyrex Labs Array 3 test after 20 years of being gluten-free? Because, if so, I want to take the test. I am in the SF Bay Area. Can I test positively without eating gluten, and, if so, where can I ask for the test?
If someone only tested positive for one of the compounds in Assay 3, would it still be beneficial to be gluten free?
I have some form of a gluten intolerance. I found out because my mom had found a article about symptoms that are overlooked in diagnosing celiac, like sinus problems, skin rashes, frequent headaches, and ADD, all of which things that I had serious problems with. My mom had sent me a link to the article and as I was reading I was realizing that I had been experiencing just about every symptom on the checklist whether it was minor or extreme. I made the choice to go gluten free for a week. It wasn’t 100% gluten free because I would always sneak small bites of food, but within a couple of weeks I already felt SO much better! I could breath through my nose for the first time in what seemed like forever, my arms were slowly clearing up, I didn’t get anymore headaches, and I was able to concentrate more! The only downside to all of this was that high school had just started up, and I wasn’t allowed to have gluten free meals. I really didn’t want to bring my own lunch everyday (because I would end up eating the same thing everyday as it would be whatever my mom buys and makes for me) and I wasn’t going to have a salad every day either. The foods administrator (lunch lady) at my school has celiac herself, and I know I didn’t have celiac, instead I believed I had a mild gluten intolerance. The lunch lady said before they could give me gluten free lunches, I had to go to the doctor to get a blood test. I didn’t have time to go to the doctor, so my mom called and told them out situation and had the doctor fax my school a note to allow me to have gluten free lunches. But it wasn’t good enough for the lunch lady. She told me my doctor was supposed to write what a specifically can and cannot have. When I finally got in to see my doctor, she was upset that the lunch lady disobeyed her note, and told my specifically that I CAN have gluten free food & CANNOT have food containing gluten. She didn’t know what else to tell me. She said she would not give me a blood test as it would be a waste of time and money, and based on my symptoms I have a mild gluten intolerance and if I were to keep eating gluten the symptoms would get worse and worse, so I should just avoid gluten. The lunch lady was mad that the doctor wouldn’t order a blood test, and my doctor was mad because this lunch lady actually called my doctor’s office asking for my information. Even if I had gotten a blood test the lunch lady would not be able to see the results. Eventually, after contacting the school nurse & the principal and getting a second doctor’s note basically saying the same thing, my mom was able to straighten things out and I can finally enjoy gluten free lunches. Being only the third person in my school system with this condition, and the only one in high school with it, I’ve had to work incredibly hard to get a school lunch I can tolerate. People are always asking questions and I tell them I do not have celiac, but a gluten intolerance and I still get the symptoms to an extent. I’m always interested to learn more about my condition, because it seems that there aren’t a lot of answers for it. I even found out a girl in my lunch has a gluten intolerance, but she just cuts down on her gluten intake to manage her symptoms by bringing her lunch every day.
I am so sorry to hear how awful that experience was with your lunch lady . After reading your comment I was so intrigued to reply and I just wanna ask , when you had gluten food and wasn’t diagnosed yet did you have bad stomach pains? Like to the point where you felt like you thought you were dying ? I experienced pains like that back in April 2015 . The hospital had no idea what was wrong with me. They thought I was pregnant and ran so many tests except never thought it was gluten. I go to a GI specialist and have an endoscopy in my upper or lower abdomen I truly can’t remember . but he told me I had acid reflux disease and might have a gluten sensitivity. He then said I to get a celiac panel test done . That cost so much money I am still paying off other bills from the hospital . my question is can you still eat fast food without hurting ? I can get away with taco bell ( I know I shouldn’t) but I don’t experience pain after with that . if I eat a bagel I do instantly.
I’ve also been doing trial and error with different food. Its so hard to believe I am gluten sensitive now after 25 years ! I always had bread and whole wheat my whole life. Why all of a sudden now that people are having these issues . crazy .
Dear Dr Kresser
My understanding of NCGS is that it’s not detectable by antibodies, but yet one experiences similar sxs to CD but not as severe. https://www.celiaccentral.org/non-celiac-gluten-sensitivity/
If your definition of NCGS is that it is detectable by antibodies – then what differentiates NCGS from CD?
This article also didnt mention the link between Celiac and Roundup/Glyphosate/GMO/Monsanto.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3945755/
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/SS-glyphosate.php
While I have celiacs, I have no issue with people with gluten intolerance, however, this article is incredibly offensive. If anything, the title of this article should be “3 reason gluten intolerance may be as serious as celiacs disease.” Celiacs disease has been scientifically proven to cause serious intestinal injury and death. Gluten intolerance has not been proven to have the same effects. It is find to try to validate your medical condition, but to do so at the expense of another is not. This article is wrong, offensive, and makes me not want to support people who are gluten intolerant, though I have vigorously defended them in the past. It took doctors over a year to diagnose me with celiacs. I was malnourished, depressed and so physically weak I could barely get out of bed in the morning and would faint at least once a week. You’re tired of people telling you your health problem isn’t serious, I get that, but don’t come after mine in response.
I hear the point you are making Christine and I agree that Celiac is a more serious physical condition than NCGS. However, from the outset, I always interpreted Chris’ article, even from the phrasing of the heading “…is potentially a much larger problem than celiac disease.” to be speaking more of the incidence of NCGS, that is, the sheer number of cases. NCGS seems to be affecting more people than Celiac seems to affect.
Also, Chris explained that the situation of misunderstanding and invalidation of NCGS sufferers appears to be more serious than what is now the case for Celiac sufferers. It seems that the denial by the public today regarding NCGS is somewhat like what existed for Celiac disease itself 2 or 3 decades ago. He also explained that due to the complexity of the testing that is currently accepted vs what is required for diagnosis of NCGS, that it may continue to be undiagnosed and thus unrecognized by the medical professions for even a longer time than Celiac ever was.
I think all these considerations that were laid out in the article were convincing enough to support Chris’s claim that in certain ways, though not including actual suffering, NCGS is definitely a more serious health issue for the whole of society, as well as for the mass of misunderstood sufferers, than Celiac has been to this point in time.
In all that Chris said though, I don’t think he in any way intended to downplay the seriousness of the suffering that goes on daily for someone plagued with Celiac disease. I think he just wants to declare that it’s time to recognize that NCGS is another condition that is receiving way less than proper attention.
This “gluten-phobia” is going too far. Sure celiacs should avoid.
Here’s the study right here:
https://knowledgeofhealth.com/?s=Gluten&x=0&y=0
Vitamin C didn’t help me and I have been trying to get healthy for 20 years trying various supplements and I’ve spent plenty of money doing so. When I eat gluten my hair falls out. My daughter has Hashimoto’s and I have lupus and thyroid disease but the tests were negative although we have the most active Celiac gene. I had to have strong evidence to stop eating gluten…cause it sucks to have to give it up. My hair and health is more important than eating flour.
And that article was written in 2011..a bit old.
You should take the time to read the article before you comment ineptly on it.
So after reading it, it is OK to comment ineptly? 😉
I have read it, and the author should be embarrassed. Any scientific article or reason-based one does not use inflammatory language such as referring to celiacs as being “phobic”. This occurs in the first paragraph.
A phobia is an irrational fear of something. If eating gluten causes significant physical distress, being “afraid” of it would not be irrational – it would instead be quite rational. That said, a desire to avoid gluten is not the same as being afraid of it.
It also fails to show the effects in-vivo, relying only on a single experiment in a lab where acid (said vitamin C) was directly added to a sample – ie. in vitro. Non-direct effects are not even considered. Would other acids have had the same effect? Is it even a valid biological process?
This last one goes direct to the heart of it’s claim: that because adding vitamin C in the form of ascorbic acid *directly* to the tissue alleviates the symptom deficiency in it is the cause of the problem to begin with.
Consider a corollary in psychology. Since adding Prozac appears to remove the symptom, depression is thus cause by Prozac deficiency. Now that sounds crazy, right? But the argument is the same.
As to the biological aspect of it, eating natural vitamin C does not cause the scenario played out in the lab as the digestive process alters and metabolizes the source depending on the bioavailability of it. Lest you think this is unrelated consider the fact that in vitro vitamin C causes oxidative damage, whereas in vivo it is not shown to have the same effect.
Ergo to conclude that because one in vitro effect was observed under a condition which does not occur naturally that gluten sensitivity is a result of vitamin C deficiency is a result driven from bias not evidence.
Finally, the article ignores the inverse possible relationship: that the effects of gluten on a sensitive body can increase the requirement for vitamin C. Thus it begs the question of which comes first, the deficiency or the condition? It is well known that being in an inflammatory condition causes an increase in the requirement for the materials the body uses to cope with it. This is why you can’t simply take samples of people w/gluten issues, and conclude that a given nutrient deficiency caused it. yet the article linked does not even consider this in it’s pursuit of “gluten isn’t a bad guy, vit-C deficiency is” position. A study in pursuit of the science would have looked for and included those who are not deficient yet still have the problem. Science is the process of making an hypothesis and trying to prove it wrong, not trying to prove it right. That means including and accounting for cases which do not support your hypothesis. Something the linked article fails to do.
And finally, it’s assertion that it is impossible to maintain a gluten free diet is laughable at best and certainly disingenuous.
Hi Christine.
I have NCGS. I too, hear what you are saying however, I suffered from liver problems, thyroid problems, my hair falling out, ataxia, depression and worst of all 25 years of severe migraines followed by four months of cluster (suicide) headaches so I am already convinced it is just as serious a coeliac disease! In fact, had I not gone gluten free I am 100% certain my life expectancy would have been no more than a few months at best. I was very, very ill. I was literally ready to commit suicide. I was that ill.
I almost died when I had a severe autoimmune reaction to FODMAPs and NCGS 12 years ago prior to being diagnosed. My gut inflammation was more than 300% than normal levels. Dr. said had my Mom brought me in 3 hours later I would have died. It took me 3 hrs to change from pj’s to clothes because the gut pain and foggyness was so severe.
So, without downplaying the gravity of Celiac Disease, I’d like to suggest that NCGS and FODMAPs should be taken just as seriously because if left undiagnosed/untreated it is just as deadly.
Since discovering my NCGS and partial FODMAP I feel like a new person without any autoimmune flare ups. I don’t wish feeling the way I did 12 years ago on anyone. Ever.
Everyone’s health concerns should be taken seriously.
I determined I am gluten intolerant through trial and error. Thanks, Chris, for confirming that many who are gluten intolerant are also of eggs and casein, which I suspected due to symptoms and have long avoided.
I agree with Chris on this issue, but are there any studies other than the study from Iran that he spoke about? Really, Iran? Do they even believe in science lol
Talk about a really rude comment. Sure you can ask about whether there are other studies out there (and it’s great you are). But making a comment implying that Iran doesn’t “believe in science” when clearly they do since there is SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH being published from there (research that doesn’t appear to be coming from the US, I might add), is uncalled for.
Hi I have Ithchyosis Vulgaris.
I am now wondering g if meat and gluten are some of the issue. I it is incurable but maybe take some of the edge off? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you
I love your posts! Read them again and again. They are so encouraging and clear as well as scientifically informative. This is fascinating stuff for us sufferers!
Several of my friends are gluten intolerant and when my symptoms began, they all said, “Get off gluten!” So I did and wow! What a difference! I can eat any kind of fruit and still drink coffee, but am sensitive to instant coffee and may be sensitive to eggs (ugh, I do love my eggs!) One GI doc wanted me to go back on gluten for two weeks so he could biopsy my small intestine to verify my problem, but I couldn’t do it to myself. The pain and disruption in life is just not worth it to me. I have been treated for hypothyroidism for nearly 10 years and as soon as I went off gluten (within 2 days) I started losing weight really fast (still taking my thyroid hormones). I finally got to an endocrinologist who is gradually lowering my T3 and T4 dosages, but at every 6 week appointment, my free T4 has gone higher despite lowering my exogenous intake. I still have a TSH of only 0.02 and my T3 levels follow my exogenous doses, but the T4 keeps going up. Why is that?
I can eat eggs and I don’t think I notice anything, BUT I have been told by my one doctor that ran a test of allergies that I shouldn’t due to an allergic reaction to them. I think the problem is my free range chickens are on an organic feed, but what they eat I am allergic to, so what they eat I eat through their eggs. The thyroid medicine I use to be on was the same thing they found it was what the pigs were eating I was getting through them. Not sure this makes sense or helps. Good luck finding out what you need to know.
Hello Dr. Chris,
Thank you very much for the valuable information on this site.
This is very much helpful to people like me who are lost with no good answers in modern medical science.
My toddler daughter (age 3) is experiencing Alopecia aeata, it started about 7-8 months back after a dose of antibiotics for her cold. Pediatrician and Dermotologists we saw in DC Metro area simply prescribed the topical liquid onintment without trying to address the root cause. We went to Homeopath in India. It got aggravated after we tried Homeopathy medicine couple of months back. Not sure whether it was medicine or the Auto immune disorder deciding take that form. Then we seeked assistance from a Naturopath in DC to identify the root cause. With the naturopath’s valuable advice we did the Cyrex tests (array 2, array 3 and array 4). Some Array 3 test results have shown she is allergic to gluten. Naturopath advised cutting off gluten and few supplements (Iron, Vitamin D, Thyroforce) from Lab corp test results which indicated these deficiencies.
I wanted to check with you following numbers whether you see any direct/indirect relationship to the alopecia aerata condition she is suffering.
Wheat IgG : Out of Range: 2.03 , Reference (0.3 – 1.5)
Wheat Germ Agglutinin IgG: Out of range: 1.52, Ref: (04 -1.3)
Native & Deamediated Giladin 33 IgG, Out of range: 2.80, Ref (0.2-1.2)
Omega Giladin 17-mer IgG: Out of range: 1.91, Ref (0.2 – 1.2)
Please note only IgG are out of range where as IgA are not.
Also other tests of diary and egg have come negative and cross food gluten tests also have come negative, although we have put her on goat milk. We have seen some improvements after shifting her to goat’s milk in terms of her energy level.
Since she is 3 and vegetarian, not sure what other changes might help. If you can think of any, please let us know.
Thank you very much for your time. Appreciate your help and support in understanding and resolving my daughter’s alopecia aerata condition.
Thanks
Shrinivas
How did I find out I have NCGS? I went on a low-carb diet to lose weight and I cut out all bread, pasta, crackers etc. Within a couple of weeks I stopped having chronic migraines, asthma, canker sores, painful joints, and more. Gone! But I still hadn’t figured out it was gluten sensitivity until I ate some pasta for dinner at a friend’s house. That night my chest was tight, I was wheezing, and I had to use my inhaler. Shortly after that I had some braised short ribs at a restaurant and I knew there must be flour in the dish because I felt wheezy and short of breath soon after eating it.
Most people are tolerant and sympathetic and make sure to have some GF crackers for me to eat, but there were a couple “friends” who sent me the NYT article to prove some point.
My sister has had IBS and Crohn’s for decades and I am convinced she is probably gluten intolerant and have told her to try giving up wheat for a month, but she doesn’t want to hear it.
By the way, I have eaten [small amounts of] pasta and bread in other countries without any noticeable ill effects. So it could be something in American wheat besides gluten. Whatever. I’m just glad I finally, at age 65, discovered my NCGS and got rid of all those pesky illnesses. The migraines were debilitating and I took asthma medication daily for 25 years.
Say what you want about GF products, but I am grateful for the companies who make them. It means I can have cake on my birthday or crackers at a party.
Thank you for all you do, Chris.
After my husband was diagnosed by a rheumatologist with Fibromyalgia, I went on the hunt for a reason he was feeling so sick. I thought he may have a gluten intolerance or candida overgrowth so he went on a strict candida and gluten free diet for 30 days. I have to note that after 1 week he was pain free. He had been having excruciating pain for over a year. We slowly introduced sugar, caffeine and then gluten back into his diet and he only reacted to the gluten. I have also had IBS for as long as I can remember. I also removed gluten from my diet and my bloating, stomach pain and gas are gone. My brain fog is gone and I wake up feeling refreshed now. Gluten sensitivity is real. I have been a very vocal advocate for going gluten free and we are so glad that we did.
I gave up wheat a year and half ago at the suggestion of my naturopath, with great results-no more diarrhea.I also added enteric coated peppermint. Bloating and terrific gas attacks remained. At the suggestion of of gastroenterologist I went on the FODMAP diet for these symptoms also with great results-no more gas. Bloating remained. HOWEVER, after one month on FODMAP I developed severe diarrhea requiring immodium several times a day in order to have any quality of life. The stool tests were negative. Manual examination of my abdomen was negative except for baseline tenderness.The diarrhea lasted about seven weeks and has lessoned a great deal after adding Allign Probiotic. I have added back some FODMAPS and am making good progress.
Still to be avoided are gluten, honey, inulin, some artificial sweeteners (such as mannitol),caffeine,soy and a few other items, and all foods must be chewed well,eaten slowly,cannot be too cold, must be in moderate amounts so as not stretch my stomach and the same foods must not be repeated several days in a row except for my staple rice, a half cup of 2% Lactaid milk for my rice cereal, and one serving of yogurt.I have graduated from a bland diet with no raw foods to a more normal diet that includes salad. Unfortunately I developed a urinary tract infection(Strep B) and am forced to take ampicillin for a week. Hope it goes well for me. I try to take the Allign between the two doses of antibiotic so as not kill it right away. Trying to stay calm and carry on.
NY Times article July 4 suggesting “gluten haters” should be focused on a generalized increase in autoimmune sensitivity contains a link to a USDA study with following amazing tidbit:
“Gluten fractionated from wheat flour by washing starch granules from a dough (sometimes called vital gluten) is often added to food products to achieve improved product characteristics. About 80% of the gluten used in the United States is importedmainly from Australia, the European Union, Canada, and China. The question of how much vital gluten contributes to the total consumption of gluten (wheat flour and wheat grain + vital gluten) is complicated by a lack of accessible information about gluten production and imports for the United States in recent years and by indications that imports are rising rapidly….
Thus, it appears that vital gluten consumption has tripled since 1977. This increase is of interest because it is in the time frame that fits with the predictions of an increase in celiac disease. It is difficult to say whether or not this increase in vital gluten consumption might contribute to an increase in the incidence of celiac diseaseparticularly when compared to the much larger intake of gluten from the consumption of wheat flour (11−12 lb/5.0−5.5 kg) per person). Similarly, I note that, although wheat flour consumption seems to be decreasing slightly in recent years (Figure 5), there was an increase in the yearly consumption of wheat flour of about 35 lb (15.9 kg) per person in the period from 1970 to 2000, which would correspond to an additional 2.9 lb (1.3 kg) of gluten per person from that extra flour intake, so that the 1970 intake of 9.1 pounds (4.1 kg) of gluten (from flour or grain) had increased to 12 pounds (5.4 kg) in 2000. It may be noted that whole wheat products, which are increasing in consumption for health reasons (especially the higher fiber content), often have vital gluten added to them to compensate for the negative effects of the ground whole grain on quality factors, such as loaf volume in breadmaking. This increase amounts to about 1.5−2.0 percentage points in product protein content, but the significance (if any) of this increase is not knownit must be considered in the context of other factors. There is evidence that the D genome of bread wheat has more epitopes active in celiac disease than the A and B genomes,21 and some of these might be the most active epitopes.” So much for whole wheat!
Another misguided study trying to call it a fad.
https://www.georgeinstitute.org.au/media-releases/dont-believe-the-hype-on-gluten-free-food
I know Gluten was causing my really bad mental health problems.
Paranoid I had cancer from childhood, anxiety, depression, social withdrawal. I started thinking I was autistic. Got to the point I couldn’t bear to face the smallest task.
I only discovered the gluten cause because of eczema and maybe some intuition. And then the slow realisation that my brain had been damaged began to dawn on me.The last time I ate gluten…hot feeling over head/face, strange dizzyness, occasionally flinching, strong head pulse and scared of the darkness at night. Feeling paranoid is the worst thing, you can’t enjoy life at all.
But I’m better now, just feel so sorry for the people who are suffering and probably torturing themselves
Matt thanks for sharing, some of this sounds familiar to what I have been experiencing as well. I had my DNA health done and it shows two genes from each of my parents for the gluten genes. My sister has paranoia schizophrenia and I feel it was brought on by eating glutens. I have been noticing lately when I eat organic onions my head gets hot. If I get corn in something (very allergic to it) my brain hurts, little seizures, headaches/migraines, and what you describe here is what I feel. I have strange things happening like the sky is closing in on me, and the new one is when it gets dark I feel trap and can’t breath as well (panic attacks/anxiety) I am so glad you are better 🙂 and sharing your experience with others.
I wish I could afford a test like the one mentioned in the article. I know I am gluten/dairy sensitive and would love to know what else to avoid. I have UC so it is very important to know which foods are “safe” and which aren’t. Sadly cost is keeping me from finding out this pertinent information. Thanks for a great article.
I am slowly coming to the conclusion that I am gluten intolerant. I frequently experience extreme indigestion and heartburn, and I’m starting to notice a correlation between this and my consumption of bread. I am cutting bread from my diet for this reason. If I eat hot dogs, I will be dying from heartburn later. I used to think it was just the dogs, but if I instead eat the weiners cut up over beans without the bun, then I don’t experience the same degree of indigestion later. It takes a long time and deliberate, intentional observations and changes to come to these conclusions. I’m sure a food and effects journal would help.
I thought it was just bread too Jeff. But if you look at the ingredients, there is gluten in hot dogs too. I read have to read the back to see if it sayes gluten free. If it doesn’t, I usually don;t eat it. Then again, whipped topping makes me blow up and hurt but can’t find what is in the whipped that causes this.
Could be the dairy if its not made from oils or it could be the carrageenan a thickener I get rashes from.
its the carrageenan.
Hi Debbie, Are you at all familiar with sulfite sensitivity? Whipped topping contains a lot of corn syrup which is loaded with sulfites only they don’t have to label it because it’s considered part of the “process” rather than an added ingredient in corn syrup & corn starch. Sulfites are hidden in a lot of foods due its use being a part of the “process”. So not having to list it for that reason is a much used labeling loophole. Sulfite sensitivity creates all sorts of individual health issues. Sulfite sensitivity is not considered an allergy because it is actually a deficiency of an enzyme, sulfite oxidase, which converts the unusable sulfites into the form the body needs & uses a lot of, sulfates. So not being able to convert sulfites to sulfates has a cumulative affect which creates a toxicity in a way unique to you. I could go on but try putting sulfite &/or sulfite sensitivity &/or foods with sulfites in your search bar & see where it leads you in regard to a possible connection to your symptoms. I obviously have a sulfite sensitivity, runs in my family, as does gluten intolerance & other food sensitivities. I also take nature throid. Am 58 & spent decades figuring out my health issues & am still working on it but I can’t imagine what shape I’d be in if I hadn’t done so. I wish you well in your search. It is worth it to feel well & be able to function.
I had never heard of the endometriosis and gluten connection previously. I had 3 surgeries for endometriosis, including a hysterectomy. Twenty years ago, I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia by The Mayo Clinic. I found out I was gluten-intolerant 7 years ago. After eliminating gluten (and dairy), my widespread fibro pains vanished. I was told by a gluten researcher that the body often reacts to dairy as well due to the size of its molecule … the body mistakes it for gluten). Although the pain disappeared, I was still left with the chronic fatigue, brain fog and constant head/neck pain. I have since discovered that I have high kryptopyrroles in the urine and issues with MTHFR. I also found out I have high lead and mercury levels. Those with continuing issues at the level of fibro, CFS, etc. could be helped by testing these as well.