Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate
  • Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    Man Claims Hookworm Treatment Led to Remission of Celiac Disease

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Can hookworms really trigger remission of celiac disease? Yes, according to a man who says he's living symptom-free since receiving hookworm treatment for his celiac disease. 

    Man Claims Hookworm Treatment Led to Remission of Celiac Disease - Hookworm. Image: CC BY 2.0--Michael Wunderli
    Caption: Hookworm. Image: CC BY 2.0--Michael Wunderli

    Celiac.com 12/16/2022 - Recently, an interesting discussion thread popped onto our celiac disease and gluten-free forum. A member of the forum, going by the handle @dixonpete, claims his celiac disease went into remission after treatment with hookworms.

    Moreover, he claims that he is essentially cured, and able to eat gluten with no side effects, and has had at least one recent negative follow up tTG antibody test to back this up.

    History of Hookworm Infection to Treat Celiac Disease

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    We've done more than a few articles on the potential to use hookworms to treat celiac disease. We've done a number of articles on hookworms as the potential future of celiac disease treatment, including: 

    Previously, we'd only reported data from various studies, some of which looked promising. Until recently we had never heard directly from anyone claiming to have gone through hookworm treatment firsthand.

    Because he is the first person we've heard from who claims direct experience with hookworm treatment for celiac disease, the information furnished by @dixonpete to the thread might be of interest to anyone who might be interested in the possibility of receiving hookworm treatment.

    Hookworms seem to work, at least partly, by blocking the inflammatory response in the gut of the host. One of the benefits of this treatment is that the hookworms may also block the gut's immune response to gluten in people with celiac disease.

    Could Hookworm Treatment Allow Celiacs to Eat Gluten Again?

    At this time, there's no data to confirm that hookworm treatment "cures" celiac disease in the classic sense of the word. In theory, if the hookworms were eliminated, then the celiac disease could return. And the hookworms don't reproduce, so you need just the right amount in the gut, but not too much.

    The current hypothesis is that the hookworms simply block the immune inflammatory response when people with celiac disease eat gluten. But even that remains unclear, and not well-supported by data. Clearly more studies need to be done to verify whether hookworms present a viable alternative for people with celiac disease.  A single example of this possibly working in real life isn't enough data to support the claim that the treatment should work for all celiacs. In fact, @dixonpete admits himself that he was suffering from both celiac disease and other conditions that drove his decision. Still, it's a compelling story. For more information, read the full discussion thread and the related articles.

    If hookworms prove to be effective treatment for celiac disease, would you be willing to consider a hookworm infection to treat your celiac disease? Let us know in the comments below.  



    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Scott Adams

    @Craig Simms, blaming a board member here for killing your son and family members--a person who happens to have volunteered to be a moderator and spends lots of his personal time helping others here with the many issues surrounding gluten sensitivity and celiac disease--is just wrong, so please don't do that.

    I've been at this for over 26 years and have never seen any scientific research that would indicate that celiac disease is: 1) Caused by any of the medications used to treat hook or tape worms; 2) That such medications could somehow affect people's genes or cause multi-generational celiac disease; or 3) That hook or tape worms or their eradication from medications somehow cause celiac disease. If you make any of these claims here you need to back it up with more than throwing around words like "CDC" and "NHC." Post some links to peer reviewed studies which show a scientific link between such medications and celiac disease.

    This article is about one person's claim that his hookworm treatment has suppressed his immune system's inappropriate response to gluten, and there is scientific research that supports this idea, which is why we did this article. Apparently you haven't read his forum thread because he's not having any negative side effects from the hookworm infection, which is being administered by experts who can monitor his situation.

    In any case, you've gone way off topic here, and you should create your own forum thread if you want to propose a new hypothesis on celiac disease--but again, please be prepared to provide links to research that would support it.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Wheatwacked
    15 hours ago, Craig Simms said:

    This was caused by his inability to absorb nutrition. They gave him vitamin "k" injections then performed the biopsy, confirming his disease. I spent the past 20 years analyzing the deaths of many family members and found that the vast majority could be directly linked to Celiac disease.

    I have no doubt those deaths might have been a result of malnutrition. I do understand your anger. We've been misinformed and possible downright lied to. I see the same pattern in my family. I believe in addition (though limited evidence) that Karen Carpenter and Elvis would be alive today had they been treated with GFD and vitamin replenishment. New studies indicate that 44% of first degree relatives may be undiagnosed Celiacs. Celiac Disease causes malabsorption of some 20 essential vitamins and minerals, and each one has its set of symptoms that arise from that deficiency that mimics other diseases. Leading to misdiagnosis and unnecessary treatment and procedures. Due in part to our cultural belief that wheat, barley, and rye are part of our cultural heritage so could not possibly be detrimental to us. God told us to eat bread.

    "As our celiac disease symptoms list of 281 ailments illustrates, the condition can affect not only the digestive system, but many other parts of the body." Celiac Disease Symptoms Checklist

    So after all the procedures, the patient continues eating the "staff of life" and continues to be aflicted with new or recurring symptoms. With serendipity, he finally stumbles on a doctor or article that starts the uphill journey to diagnosis of Celiac Disease. Some get it fast, others take 10 years or more.

    Meantime, the underlying problem of malnutrition continues because the general assumption is "Celiac Disease? Avoid gluten and you'll be fine. Have a good day." Ignoring the advice of the Merck Manual to "Instruct the patient to follow a gluten-free diet and replace any vitamin or mineral deficiencies." But no one actually seems to know how to determine. The Western diet itself is inherently riddled with deficiencies and some advice is contradictory to other advice.

    Vitamin D is the moderator of the autoimmune system. A lifeguard or anyone working in the sun has blood plasma of around 80 ng/ml vitamin D. Yet a blood level of only greater than 29 ng/ml is considered enough. That number is based on what we need to avoid rickets in children or osteomalacia in adults, not what it takes to keep our T and B cells from running amuck and attacking our own organs. Perhaps there is a molecule that the hookworm produces in out gut that reduces inflammation that deserves study, after all in a heathy gut biome we get most of our Lactase from lactobaccilus to let us comsume milk into adulthood.

     Possible Role of Vitamin D in Celiac Disease Onset " VDR [vitamin D receptor] has been reported to be expressed on cell types as antigen-presenting cells and lymphocytes, underlining a possible role of vitamin D as a key modulator of immune and inflammation mechanisms, and suggesting VDR gene polymorphisms to be markers of protection from or susceptibility to autoimmune diseases"

     

     

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Guest Hildegard

    Posted

    Yeah. Absolutely… if only for the cross contamination!!!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    dixonpete
    7 hours ago, Scott Adams said:

    @Craig Simms

    I've been at this for over 26 years and have never seen any scientific research that would indicate: ... 3) That hook or tape worms or their eradication from medications somehow cause celiac disease

    Actually that 3rd point is what proponents of Helminthic Therapy argue. Nothing to do with the medication per se, but the fact the medications enable people to live without helminths that's the problem.

    The core argument behind HT is the human immune system evolved with the presence of helminths. Their immune modulating activity is a component of a balanced and well-functioning immune system. Take the helminths away and things can go awry.

    An indication that might be the case is the frequency of immune related disorders vs areas of endemic helminth hosting. The more helminths, the less autoimmune problems there are. Of course, helminths can cause problems all by themselves. HT deliberately uses the benign helminth species and keeps their numbers low.Distribution-of-autoimmune-disorders-and-helminths-Map-on-the-left-side-shows-the.webp.ace52b27083d8016688aa7a5bef96de1.webp

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Guest Vicky

    Wouldn’t it be the drugs used for the treatment of the worms that may make the differences? I don’t think anyone is suggesting getting infected with the parasite cured them!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    dixonpete
    1 hour ago, Guest Vicky said:

    Wouldn’t it be the drugs used for the treatment of the worms that may make the differences? I don’t think anyone is suggesting getting infected with the parasite cured them!

    That's exactly the claim. Substitute the word parasite with symbiont and the claim sounds better.

    Think of the helminths as acting as a portable immune system regulator. In the case of celiac disease people with the DQ2 or DQ8 alleles fare less well dealing with helminth absence than people with other alleles. That's my explanation of the facts anyway.

    I did exceptionally well with hookworms. I did a gluten test on day 39 after inoculation, passed, and the next day I was out shopping for bread. With most people it takes longer before they can tolerate gluten. Some hookworm hosts don't get the huge glutening type reactions any longer but still feel better not consuming gluten. Others unfortunately stay reactive to gluten. You won't know what camp you fall into until you try.

    But yeah, for me hosting hookworms turned off my celiac disease and ulcerative colitis like flipping a switch. Back in 2019 I had them die off in early March and I had to go back to being gluten-free and meat-free. The hookworms have to stay healthy for me to stay healthy.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Blue-Sky

    Celiac disease can go under the radar of blood tests and symptoms. An analogy would be having a fire burning in a different part of the house from where you are. You may or may not see smoke from the fire. There is evidence that celiac disease starts out as pre-celiac disease which can be tested by autoimmune antibodies in the stool a long time before antibodies are raised in the blood.

    The body will try to balance out antibody levels to prevent high levels of inflammation which are harmful. When the body can no longer check this process the antibody levels rise.

    In the msg below, does that mean you weren't eating gluten before?

    38 minutes ago, dixonpete said:

    I did a gluten test on day 39 after inoculation, passed, and the next day I was out shopping for bread.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    dixonpete
    20 minutes ago, Blue-Sky said:

    In the msg below, does that mean you weren't eating gluten before?

    My celiac disease kicked in about the same time as my ulcerative colitis back in 2005/2006. The UC was easy to diagnose. A scope saw all the ulcers.

    The celiac disease went on for two years before I figured it out on my own. My GP missed it, though I don't know why because my symptoms were textbook.

    I stayed gluten-free from June 21, 2008 till Dec 3rd, 2018 when I did a gluten test after my first hookworm inoculation. Deliberately ingesting gluten is a remarkably difficult thing to do for a highly reactive celiac. I used a pinch of bread that I borrowed from a friend.

    I figure I was glutened about 20x in those 10 years between 2008 and 2018. Most of that was in the first year or two when I was learning the ropes. A small exposure would mean an hour or two of diarrhea. A big exposure would cause a catastrophic reaction. Norovirus level. Projectile vomiting.

    After that successful Dec 2018 gluten test I started shoveling gluten in. English muffins, donuts, pies. I went to every fast food joint and tried all the burgers. Who wouldn't? It had been more than 10 years.

    No reaction at all besides weight gain.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Al Dente

     

    Hookworm therapy was discovered when researchers were investigating Viking mummies. The Vikings, known for their ferocity, strength, and hardy immune systems, under the harshest conditions, were a curiosity to these scientists.

    When sampling their organs, they found an extremely high population of hookworms.  That led to their hypothesis for hookworm therapy for auto immune disorders.  Hookworm therapy has been used for a variety of A I conditions.  As stated above, they enter the body through the feet which are in a basin of water with hookworms.

    There is nothing wrong with a natural remedy, instead of constantly relyingon Big Pharma for help.  God Bless, and have a great day.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Kathy8183

    I don't care how extraordinary a theory or potential treatment or cure sounds, it's a gateway to some hope for dealing with this awful and still misunderstood, often misdiagnosed disease that our medical community seems to prefer ignoring causing more suffering. Cures have often arisen from crazy sounding approaches proving how our health care system in more recent times has become excessively narrow, sterile and farther away from organic living to drug-supported existence controlling our lives by big pharma. I would not like the idea of hookworm treatment but probably less so than struggling with the costs, confusion, limitations and frustration celiac disease causes. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    trents
    3 hours ago, Al Dente said:

     

    Hookworm therapy was discovered when researchers were investigating Viking mummies. The Vikings, known for their ferocity, strength, and hardy immune systems, under the harshest conditions, were a curiosity to these scientists.

    When sampling their organs, they found an extremely high population of hookworms.  That led to their hypothesis for hookworm therapy for auto immune disorders.  Hookworm therapy has been used for a variety of A I conditions.  As stated above, they enter the body through the feet which are in a basin of water with hookworms.

    There is nothing wrong with a natural remedy, instead of constantly relyingon Big Pharma for help.  God Bless, and have a great day.

    Do you know what the average lifespan of Vikings was? I am always skeptical of people associating healing powers to this or that food or health practice of ancient peoples that usually died before the age of 40. And if the Vikings were in fact healthier than other people groups of the period, was it because of hookworms or in spite of them and actually do to other factors?

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    dixonpete
    1 hour ago, Kathy8183 said:

    I don't care how extraordinary a theory or potential treatment or cure sounds, it's a gateway to some hope for dealing with this awful and still misunderstood, often misdiagnosed disease that our medical community seems to prefer ignoring causing more suffering. Cures have often arisen from crazy sounding approaches proving how our health care system in more recent times has become excessively narrow, sterile and farther away from organic living to drug-supported existence controlling our lives by big pharma. I would not like the idea of hookworm treatment but probably less so than struggling with the costs, confusion, limitations and frustration celiac disease causes. 

    I didn't like the idea either, the main reason I was pushed over the edge was because of the colitis. Celiac disease was one thing, but the colitis pain was intolerable for me.

    It would be better if the solution was rubbing dandelions under one's chin, but it is what it is.

    The way it is now, you reach out to the provider and arrange the purchase, the larvae in 11 days or so if you pay for expedited shipping, and you slap them on your arm. It's not difficult.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites



    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate
  • About Me

    Jefferson Adams

    Jefferson Adams is Celiac.com's senior writer and Digital Content Director. He earned his B.A. and M.F.A. at Arizona State University. His articles, essays, poems, stories and book reviews have appeared in numerous magazines, journals, and websites, including North American Project, Antioch Review, Caliban, Mississippi Review, Slate, and more. He is the author of more than 2,500 articles on celiac disease. His university coursework includes studies in science, scientific methodology, biology, anatomy, physiology, medicine, logic, and advanced research. He previously devised health and medical content for Colgate, Dove, Pfizer, Sharecare, Walgreens, and more. Jefferson has spoken about celiac disease to the media, including an appearance on the KQED radio show Forum, and is the editor of numerous books, including "Cereal Killers" by Scott Adams and Ron Hoggan, Ed.D.

    >VIEW ALL ARTICLES BY JEFFERSON ADAMS

     


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Related Articles

    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 11/16/2009 - Could unknown benefits from one of the oldest parasites of the human digestive tract hold the key to cure for celiac disease?
    Australian scientists think so. Encouraged by successful treatments of Crohn's and ulcerative colitis by American researchers using a pig whipworm (Trichuris sues), a team of Australian researchers is recruiting volunteers with celiac disease for trials using human hookworm (Necator americanus).
    The researchers have undertaken a similar preliminary study using a human hookworm in Crohn's patients.
    Researchers hypothesize that the disappearance of intestinal parasites from humans in developed countries may be responsible for the upsurge in many diseases including Celiac Disease, Crohn's, ulcerative colitis, asthma and hay fever. ...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 10/03/2014 - Celiac disease patients in Australia have shown a major improvement in gluten tolerance after receiving experimental hookworm treatments. The study is part of an effort to determine if parasitic helminths, such as hookworm, might help to treat inflammatory disorders, including celiac disease.
    In this case, the research team assessed the influence of experimental hookworm infection on the predicted outcomes of three escalating gluten challenges in volunteers with confirmed celiac disease.
    The research team included John Croese, MD, Paul Giacomin, PhD, Severine Navarro, PhD, Andrew Clouston, MD, Leisa McCann, RN, Annette Dougall, PhD, Ivana Ferreira, BSc, Atik Susianto, MD, Peter O'Rourke, PhD, Mariko Howlett, MD, James McCarthy, MD, Christian Engwerda, PhD,...


    Dr. Vikki Petersen D.C, C.C.N
    Have Celiac Disease? Try a Little Hookworm with that Pasta!
    Celiac.com 07/26/2016 - What a gross title–it bothers me and I wrote it! It wasn't my idea originally. The research paper the data came from was entitled, "Experimental hookworm infection and gluten microchallenge promote tolerance in celiac disease" published recently in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
    It might be gross but the results were pretty darn interesting. Now don't try this at home, needless to say, but let's look at what these professional researchers discovered.
    The hookworm, also known as a parasitic helminth, is known to have beneficial effects in inflammatory disorders. Therefore the researchers decided to see what would occur if they induced a hookworm infection into known celiacs and fed them escalating amounts of gluten.
    A one year study was e...


    Jefferson Adams
    Can Bloodsucking Parasites Help Treat Asthma and Celiac Disease?
    Celiac.com 11/30/2016 - Trials using hookworm as a possible treatment for celiac disease are already underway in Australia, but they latest hookworm news indicates that they might also be useful for treating asthma.
    The New World hookworm, aka necator americanus, is long and slender as an angel hair noodle. Adults are large enough to be seen with the naked eye. Seen up close, they look more like the sand worms in the movie Dune than anything people are used to seeing here on earth.
    Researchers are reporting that a protein produced by hookworms reduces the symptoms of asthma in mice, and could one day be used to treat asthma in humans, says the journal Science Translational Medicine. These parasites are some of the most maligned creatures in the animal kingdom. They chew into the human...


  • Recent Activity

    1. - RMJ replied to Jsingh's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      Contaminated cooking oils

    2. - Deb67 replied to Deb67's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      is Kirkland Imported French Brie gluten freeL

    3. - Jsingh posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      Contaminated cooking oils

    4. - knitty kitty replied to CeliacPsycho246's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      4

      GLUTEN FREE OCD MEDICATION


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      126,196
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Christy Lyerly
    Newest Member
    Christy Lyerly
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.9k
    • Total Posts
      69.2k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Popular Now

    • CeliacPsycho246
      4
    • CeliacChica
      43
    • ellanataliw
      6
  • Popular Articles

    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
  • Upcoming Events

×
×
  • Create New...