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3 Reasons Gluten Intolerance May Be More Serious Than Celiac Disease

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Recent news stories have downplayed the significance of non-celiac gluten sensitivity, even going as far as suggesting that it doesn’t exist. But a growing body of evidence has proven that gluten intolerance is not only real, but is potentially a much larger problem than celiac disease.

non-celiac gluten sensitivity
Non-celiac gluten sensitivity is more common than once thought. iStock.com/jeka1984

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:

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.

gluten chart copy

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

There has been a big backlash in both the mainstream media and on social media channels against the idea of gluten intolerance. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, uninformed journalists and armchair Facebook scientists continue to argue that NCGS is some kind of widespread collective delusion—simply a figment of the imagination of anyone who claims to experience it.

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:

  1. 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).
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. 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).

Finally, it’s worth pointing out that many people that are intolerant of gluten are also intolerant of other food proteins found in foods like dairy, eggs, and unfortunately, coffee. Studies have shown that about 50 percent of patients with CD show intolerance to casein, a protein in milk. (20)

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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633 Comments

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  1. Very helpful! Thank you!

    My gluten related conditions are hypothyroidism, depression, dermatitis hepitaformis and migraines.

    My Kaiser docs (GP and dermatologist) insisted that the test results that showed gluten sensitivity were not reliable and that their brand of evidence based medicine would help me. They prescribed meds and told me not to waste my energy and money on a gf diet and to go splurge on the foods I had been missing. Well, I was so hopeful and the donuts were delicious but the consequences were brutal. The worst was that I fell into a deep depression.

    I would like to visit you, Doc and see what else I can be doing. I would also like to know what I should tell these Kaiser docs. I feel that they are irresponsible in their advice (first do no harm) and that a respectful rather than disdainful approach to new potentially helpful approaches to health problems would be more productive!

    Lastly, I would like to know if anyone can offer positive outcomes for MS sufferers with these new ideas of sensitivity and follow on lifestyle changes.

    Thanks

    • Diana,
      I’m so sorry you had doctors so irresponsible in their treatment recommendations. There are two statements I hear almost daily from holistic practitioners. 1. All disease begins in the digestive tract (your gut, gastrointestinal system). 2. Food is medicine!

      If you can, seek out a holistic nutritionist to help you plan/change your diet. (functional medicine/naturopath,even a chiropractic office can help or refer you) Doughnuts are NOT good! Processed, packaged, canned, fast food, etc. are not good for our bodies. If you are suffering from MS, your diet could be extremely important to your quality of life. Another consideration for MS is your dental health. Your GI tract begins with your mouth. Do you have mercury fillings a/or root canals that should be removed? If this applies, please seek out a holistic dentist to help guide you as well. Your immune system is essential for everyone but especially those with chronic disease. Heavy metals, less than nutritional food consumption, prescription medications, toxic environments….they all can place a burden on your immune system making it difficult for your body to fight against invaders and heal itself.
      Best wishes for you~
      Tracy

    • As far as MS check out Dr Terry Wahls website. She was in a reclined wheelchair and is now biking and walking using a protocol that is based on paleo. She is also running clinical trials. She treats patients with head trauma and says she sees improvement using her protocol.

    • Dear Tracy Gordon:

      Yes, there is very useful information about MS (and many other disorders!) in Dr. David Perlmutter’s new book called BRAIN MAKER.

      Its an incredible eye opener and I would consider it an
      “adjunct” to what Chris maintains in his publications…

      As a neurologist, Permutter focuses mainly on the BRAIN and its many disorders. I’ve been following his advice for just 10 days and see an incredible improvement in my mood (have sub-clinical depression), skin (severe rashes, acne) and energy level!

      Take a look at it in a bookstore…you won’t be able to put it down!

    • For MS and other autoimmune issues, check out the Wahl Protocol that Dr Terry Wahl developed and used to reverse her progression MS that had her in a reclining wheelchair or in bed until she started this nutritional protocol. Within 9 months she was able to do an 18 mile family bike ride and no longer needed to use a cane. She continues to do clinical trials using her protocol.
      Her Ted talk was the sensation of 2012. Google it to listen to it.

  2. Chris,
    Thank you for the “3 Reasons GI May Be …” article. I have been gluten free for about 18 months with good results. I am also dairy sensitive. I can cheat a bit on dairy via very small quantities, lactose free milk, and a lactase enzyme supplement when in doubt.

    My comment re you article is that I have worked with two doctors – one on a ongoing basis for two years and another (a Dr. K. Clarke out of his Pittsburgh based Celiac Clinic) as a second opinion. My Ohio based doctor took 6 months to diagnose celiac with multiple biopsies from just about every part of my gut. He and I were persistent following a negative blood test! He claims that I am one for the books as the positive biopsies came uniquely from my lower intestine. Post conversion to gluten free I had multiple symptoms that took more time to diagnose – very low B12(35 vs 250 target). B12 absorption occurs in the same area as my positive celiac biopsie. I am now on monthly B 12 injections with very good results. As I love bread, and was suffering from the low B12 Idecided to go to Dr. Clarke for a second opinion. He reviewed the blood test results, did a number of other tests (no blood was drawn) and concluded Post Infection IBS stemming from a very bad reaction to scallops 10 years earlier which was in fact the start (without letup) of my digestive problems. He prescribed the elimination, sequential readmission / test of foods to determine my going forward diet leading to gut healing and potential complete healing / unrestrictive diet. I decided to stick with the celiac /dairy diagnosis and have not looked back.

    My point – we need education re the more extensive testing approach and more carefull research. Keep up the good work.

  3. I inadvertently removed gluten from my diet 3 years ago when I read that grains may be causing my joint pain. After not only getting rid of the joint pain but a plethora of other problems I had suffered with for years (and I was only 23 at the time – so thankful I figured this out early in life!) I noticed if I had even a minuscule amount of gluten or my food had been cross contaminated with gluten I would get extremely sick for several weeks. I could no longer eat at restaurants or as a guest in somebody’s home safely, yet I never got sick from gluten free grains (I just felt a little crappy). Thats when I realized gluten must be the issue. This was difficult for me to believe because even though I had about 15 or so symptoms clear up after removing gluten, digestive problems were never one of them until it had been out of my diet for a while. It was also difficult for me to tell people “I’m gluten intolerant” because it was self diagnosed and there’s so much backlash against people who can’t eat gluten. I would always have to specify “I can’t eat gluten – but not by choice” because people would insist that just a little bite won’t hurt my silly diet. I finally went talked to my doctor about it last year because I hated not having an “official” diagnosis. I knew she wouldn’t be able to test me after not eating gluten for over 2 years but the fact that she 100% agreed with me made me feel validated.

  4. I have been tested twice for celiac and both tests came back negative. I had terrible intestinal issues and chronic diarrhea. I have Hashimotos and am lactose intolerant too. When I had a colonoscopy the GI did a biopsy and found microscopic colitis, which is extremely irritated by gluten. I have been gluten free for over a year and have had no more diarrhea. We have since found out my daughter has Celiac and two of her four children have ncgs. So i think I would have tested positive on those tests had my doctors been more thorough. So I remain happily gluten free 🙂

  5. I went off gluten for a month, and I could breathe through my nose for the first time in my life! Went out for Italian food to test it and 3 days later was congested again. Even eating a bite of bread would make me phlegmy. Have been off gluten for 7 years now. Don’t miss it much and it’s really nice to be able to breathe through my nose 🙂

  6. I stopped eating gluten a few years ago to stop my migraine headaches. Now I am extremely sensitive to gluten. If I accidentally eat it in about 1 to 1/2 hours I get a pain in my stomach, nausea and sweat profusely, followed by vomiting and lethargy. After I have nothing left to vomit I get the chills for a couple hours. Is there anyone I can see to help me with this? I guess the good news is I don’t get migraines anymore.

  7. There is so much emotion attached to this issue. I completely can relate to the statement in CK’s well written article that “This silent form of CD is far from harmless; it is associated with a nearly fourfold increase in the risk of death. (2)” My mother just passed away from scleroderma.She was only 70. I tried so hard to get her and my family to make her meals GF (I don’t live in the same city). The sad thing is they tried but failed and many of the products they bought had horrendous ingredients (even though I explained which ingredients were good and which were harmful). One of the breads they bought was actually called “Everything but Gluten!” it had soy, canola oil, sugar, a ton of toxic ingredients. Even the meal replacement they gave her in the hospital had canola oil as the third ingredient. This is for REAL people! Chronic autoimmune diseases do take lives and the doctors who treat them (mostly conventional in Canada) do not believe in the relationships between food and disease. No one ever tested my Mom for celiac. But they did every other test on her heart and lungs. The doctor can make all the difference- my mother believed in her doctors- who told her to take drugs and that she would die of this disease. If they would have told her to stop eating gluten she would have. Instead she constantly self-injured her body with gluten and other bad processed food. Part of the blame is on her for not taking control of her health. I blame myself for not insisting she get tested for celiac.
    I ordered an autopsy on her and I read the results now of her stomach “autolytic changes are present with associated loss of mucosal architecture, patchy acute and chronic inflammation and local hemorrhages.” To quote Dr. Peter Green author of Celiac Disease, A Hidden Epidemic, ” If the intestinal villi are inflamed or destroyed, the digestion of food can be altered, disrupted, or completely halted. Food is maldigested and malabsorbed. It remains in the lumen,enters the colon, and causes diarrhea. And malabsorption feeds on itself-the lack of nutrients radiating throughout and eventually affecting the entire body.” That’s what happened to my Mom, the effects of gluten, I would argue, were progressive but devastating which took away her will to live. People in pain and who are on oxygen in the end and who are told there is no hope- why would they even consider giving up apple pie or alcohol? It’s up to doctors to get it right and communicate the relationship between food that damages and impairs the body and disease that kills. Sick people go to the doctor and a great deal of them believe everything their doctor says. The people reading this website are the ones who are taking control of their own health- that’s great! How can we help/reach the others (including the doctors) who don’t know about this?

    • My mother died in 2004 from Scleroderma. She had CREST, and basically starved to death. Her doctors told her it was all in her head and she didn’t get a definitive diagnosis until a year before she died. She refused to get another doctor and none of us knew anything about gluten back then. Since then, my son has been diagnosed with NCGS, and I have Hashimoto’s. A niece has Grave’s. My son and I were both treated for Celiacs, but it wasn’t a thorough test. My symptoms with gluten are mainly fatigue and joint pain, but it only takes a little bit. My son’s are very severy gastric issues, including bleeding. I’m surprised that neither of us have Celiacs but I’m going to suggest further testing for us both, especially looking at our family history. One more thing I find interesting. We’re immigrants, and no one in Norway are experiencing the same things we are here in the US.norway are experiencing the same things we are here in the US..

  8. I am 100% convinced that eating wheat germ on my yogurt DAILY for many years destroyed the cartilage in my basal thumb area. When I gave up wheat germ–after reading all the anti-grain literature–my previously chronic pain completely went away and I regained my almost totally lost grip strength (I was dropping everything and couldn’t open a heavy door with the affected hand). I did gluten challenges that didn’t seem to affect me, and I had a complete work-up for celiac, but it showed nothing. For me, the wheat term was much more damaging than gluten. I am totally convinced of this, at least in my own case.

  9. This is a topic that boggles my mind. I do follow many blogs on both sides of the issue.

    I must say, I have happily added back most things to my diet without and negative side effects. Gluten, however, is something I am hesitant about. I suppose I should and see how my own body reacts.

    In the end, we are all so different. Some of us are carb-loaders (hi!) and some of us are keto. There are many factors in play, and between specific genome and microbiome combinations, it’s hard to say what works.

    But it sounds like gluten IS a problem for at least some people who are not diagnosed celiac.

  10. Do you have any info on Gluten Intolerance or CD after surgery? I have read that it could get worse after surgery, but I can’t find an explanation why it does this. Mine became worse after I had a laparoscopic surgery. (I had the surgery to see if my ovaries had cysts, thinking that was causing my pains in my hip, and lower back, but they found nothing. Later I stopped eating gluten and within 5 days I felt a million times better). My mother in law just had heart surgery and is now having lots of diarrhea and other issues not related to her surgery. Should I ask her doctors to test for CD?

  11. Kris
    RE: Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, uninformed journalists and armchair Facebook scientists continue to argue that NCGS is some kind of widespread collective delusion—simply a figment of the imagination of anyone who claims to experience it. And for reasons that I do not fully understand, they do so with an almost religious fervor.

    My response is a jaundiced and sceptical view that a third force is at play inundating media with twisted stories to protect a financial position.

    • I don’t doubt that you’re correct, but I also think the Dunning-Kruger effect is part of the explanation. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect. Many “science journalists” and lay people lack the ability to critically interpret a study like the Gibson paper (which was erroneously used as “proof” that NCGS doesn’t exist), yet they do not seem conscious of their ineptitude.

      • Chris, this may be more sinister than the standard practice of paid, corporate trolls on the internet tossing out disinformation and misinformation.

        According to Dr Tom O’Bryan’s recent June interview on Lisa Garr’s Aware Show, gmo wheat has already been approved and is being grown now. Most likely, this new modified product will not be labelled.

        As you can see, this blog is already loaded with comments. My jaw dropped when I learned that gmo wheat had finally gotten federal approval. Since when? Gmo wheat had been blocked for years. Thus these seemingly ignorant denials in the press start to take on a different light, eh?

        Just hope you are doing a great job in training others in your protocols, because surely looks like this latest insult to the US food supply could be a real mess in the making.

  12. I was on a study of rheumatoid arthritis and diet by Gail Darlington in the U.K. about 35 years ago, and I found that wheat was one of my problems. This specialist wrote a book about her results and she included information on leaky gut that long ago!
    I also developed Hashimoto’s because I used to cheat on the diet occasionally. But after finding out that the antibodies to gliaden stay in the system for 3 months, I am completely wheat free, and I have cut my thyroxine down from 100 mg to 25 mg.
    Before I knew about the wheat problem, I found that when I lived (in Iran) or traveled in hot countries (India) – where the wheat is “soft” and did could make European style bread, my symptoms vanished. This may explain why our ancestors could eat grains without too many problems – our wheat has been highly bred for maximum gluten.
    As an aside, this is the same for me with milk. I and my mother and sister are allergic to cow´s milk (we all had sinus problems) – again cows have been intensively bred and have a type of casein that is not common. But our family can eat milk products from sheep and goats. Modern agriculture has a lot to answer for.

    • Don’t forget, in Europe – at least in central Euope like Germany where I’m from – they have different agriculture regulations than here in the USA. For instance, many foods over there containing grains I tolerate, whereas here I don’t. The same goes for Milk Products! Could be that in Europe they FORBID the spraying with Roundup, GMO technology of crops, or the growth hormones & antibiotics treatment of cattle.

  13. Hi Chris,
    I have self-diagnosed my gluten intolerance after severe rheumatic pains that have me bed ridden for at least a couple of days. I also react to coffee with the same symptoms. While I was able to quit coffee, I can’t say the same thong about gluten and occasionally have some fresh baked bread or pizza, and suffer from it. I am now pregnant and find myself craving these the whole time. Every week I cave in at least once, paying miserably for it for the rest of the week. I feel like a drug addict.. My fear is that I am hurting my baby because of the symptoms I have. Am I? My doctor said that I would have to be severely ill to cause any harm to the baby, but somehow I don’t believe it. My biggest question and concern is if I am causing any harm to the baby, and will he suffer from the same
    Conditions I have? Should I feed him gluten when he will be on solids? What if he doesn’t react to it but he is still sensitive? Please respond and help me clear this, thank you for what you are doing, you are touching our lives in so many ways!

    • I read somewhere by one of our many experts on gluten sensitivity, that you should not expose a child under 2 to wheat. I can’t remember who it was but his argument made sense to me. Maybe you can Google it? I had 20 symptoms go away completely when I changes my diet. The most severe ones were caused by gluten, the others went away when I added fat and upped my protein intake. Food is powerful!

  14. In September of 2014, I started seeing a chiropractor who was very knowledgeable about health issues. His wife has the same disorder as I do – Hashimoto’s (an autoimmune disorder which affects the thyroid). He said his wife has the same disorder and so, while not an expert, he had done lots of research and that I might want to consider giving up gluten. I decided to take the plunge. Long story short, after months of problems caused by my disorder and the difficulty in getting my dosage of synthroid right, getting off the gluten and seeing this doctor has restored me to excellent health. My thyroid numbers have been normal for months!!!! I haven’t had anyone criticize because it is hard to argue with results. My friends and family know all the things I had been dealing with prior to giving up the gluten.

  15. Hi,
    I have been diagnosed with several Autoimmunities and one rare disease. I also have food sensitivities aka Glutens. I have found really good products that are Gluten,Soy free. Low glycemic with high Protien, minerals and vitamins. I would be happy to share with anyone this info. I am on FB.. Thanks,
    Jamie Moore

  16. We are gluten free as a family, principally for my husband’s health problems, but we have all benefited. A relative of mine came to stay who has ulcerative colitis. By the end of the week she looked a different person and was having normal bowel movements. Then she remembered how much better she had been some years previously on the Atkins diet.

    As I’d done a fair bit of research on this topic, I was able to tell her about Elaine Gottshall’s experience with her young daughter, diagnosed with ulcerative colitis back in the 50’s. For anyone unfamiliar with her story, it’s worth checking out, on-line or in her book, “Breaking the Vicious Cycle”. Elaine Gottshall has since passed away, but others like you, Chris, have taken up the mantle. Also, a Russian doctor, Natasha Campbell-McBride, and her GAPS Diet that some may have come across, gluten free but also cutting out other carbs.

    The sad thing is, my relative didn’t keep up the gluten free diet and is very poorly. If it had been her doctor that had instructed her to be gluten free it would be a different matter.

  17. Several people asked about the validity of IgG tests. I do a lot of research in peer-reviewed journals, and I can assure you ELISA-type IgG testing is commonplace and accepted in a range of fields for a variety of purposes.

    IgG testing is not recommended for diagnosis of food “allergies” because those are more often an IgE response (and are usually more immediate and can be life-threatening), and testing IgG won’t give you that information. Chris is very careful to talk about sensitivity, rather than allergy.

    • It took 30 years to diagnose my food allergies because my reactions are not immediate. I now have multiple food allergies , documented by a Board Certified allergist. I can drink dairy and just have a stomach ache the next morning or diarrhea a few days later.

  18. I was tested for CD 20 years ago, was told I was wheat intolerant but there was no sign of damage so I carried on eating wheat. I bad a scan of my gall bladder because I was in a lot of pain but no stones were to be seen. 2 1/2 years ago I was finding it painful to sit in an easy chair, then started the symptoms of polymyalgia rheumatica, which the doctor tested for and told me everything was fine. I started having acupuncture and taking vitamin B5 along with fish oil and other supplements, and on the advice of my acupuncturist attempted to cut gluten completely from my diet. The pain in my gall bladder area has significantly improved, and I don’t bloat so often. The polymyalgia rheumatica is also receeding gradually. I asked my current doctor if I could have help with the cost of gluten free foods but was refused as I don’t have CD and anyway my doctor doesn’t know there is anything wrong with me. I have not pursued the matter as I would not wish to take steroids, I am doing quite well on the alternative medicine route, neither would I want to eat gluten for weeks in order to have another test for CD, I suffer for days after accidentally eating a wheat containing food!

  19. About 30 years ago I went on the Atkins diet and lost a lot of weight. I also noticed that my severe pollen allergies went away at the same time. At that time I was typically on two different inhalers in both the spring and the fall. When I quit the diet my pollen allergies returned. So through trial and error I eventually figured out that it was the wheat that was causing the problems. I have no idea if it was the gluten specifically or some other part of the wheat. Nevertheless, since I quit the wheat I have rarely gotten so much as a runny nose during pollen season. I’ve been living wheat-free for so long now that I don’t even think about it. At one time though there was nothing I liked more than a fresh-baked bagel. I also now live in one of the worst areas in the country in terms of pollen counts (Tennessee). When someone here now complains of pollen allergies I suggest that they eliminate wheat for 30 days and see what happens. No idea if that has ever helped anyone but it is really an easy intervention.

    • Ditto here. GF 5 years. Wish I found out much earlier. Bread or breathing. That’s what it boils down to for me.

  20. Hi Chris,

    I have been eating gluten-free and dairy free for several years after a trip to Haiti, where I contracted several parasites (which are now gone).

    My symptoms seemed to improve being on a GF and DF diet. A couple years ago I wanted to see if I was really intolerant to gluten (since I had been on it for years prior to the trip). The doctor did a generic blood test, which came back slightly positive. After going back on gluten for 3-4 weeks (eating sourdough bread several times a day), my endoscopy came back that I was fine.

    My question is, can I still be gluten intolerant with a negative endoscopy (the “gold standard”)? Also, would you recommend reintroducing these foods back in to see if I could tolerate them?

    • Reread first the paragraph under “1: Celiac disease is far easier to diagnose than NCGS” If there is no damage to the gut, an endoscopy will be negative. So yes, you can still be gluten intolerant with a negative endoscopy.