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    Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    Non-celiac Gluten Sensitivity: Fact or Fiction?

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Celiac.com 02/28/2013 - An entry in the Patient Journey section of the British Medical Journal highlights the confusion around non-celiac gluten sensitivity (Open Original Shared Link).

    Photo: CC--PerterJr1961In the entry, a person without celiac disease describes how, after years of unexplained health problems, a chance conversation on an internet forum led him to try a gluten-exclusion diet.

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    He claims he saw dramatic results: “Within a week of excluding gluten and lactose from my diet, all my symptoms had dramatically improved in just the same way as when I previously starved myself.”

    After accidentally eating gluten the symptoms returned “within hours.” Such dramatic relief of symptoms led him to seek out what he calls “proper diagnosis.”

    This, in turn, led him to Kamran Rostami, whose account of the condition supplements the patient’s story. Rostami says that the patient, like others had "negative immunoallergy tests to wheat and negative coeliac serology; normal endoscopy and biopsy; symptoms that can overlap with coeliac disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and wheat allergy.” Symptoms resolved on a gluten-free diet. Since there are no biomarkers, gluten sensitivity is the ultimate diagnosis of exclusion.

    However, these facts, along with the lack of a disease mechanism have left some clinicians unconvinced.

    Some, like Luca Elli are calling for aspects of gluten sensitivity clarified before doctors start “treating” people for this new “disease” (Open Original Shared Link).

    Elli asks some logical questions, such as "Is gluten sensitivity different from irritable bowel syndrome, or is it simply a variant that benefits from a common therapeutic approach?"

    To get an answer, many clinicians are looking to published literature (Open Original Shared Link). For example, a few randomized trials suggest that non-celiac gluten-sensitivity is a real condition, affecting 6% of nearly 6000 people tested in a Maryland clinic.

    A multi-center trial is currently recruiting people without celiac disease, but with gluten sensitivity for a challenge with gluten or placebo.

    Meanwhile, clinicians are advising that patients who have had celiac disease excluded through blood tests and duodenal biopsy be told that they may suffer from a newly recognized clinical condition which is not yet fully understood.

    In related news, a letter published this week by David Unsworth and colleagues describes an “explosion of requests” for serological testing since 2007, particularly from primary care physicians (doi:10.1136/bmj.e8120). They note that NICE guidance in 2009 has done little to reduce the requests.

    They also point out that, as the number of people being tested has risen, the rates of confirmed celiac disease has fallen to just over 1%, which is no better than rates achieved by random screening.

    They call for more targeted testing, limited to groups in whom detection rates are highest: children with failure to thrive, family history, or type 1 diabetes, and adults attending diabetes and gastroenterology clinics.

    However, such advice would seem to ignore cases like those described in the Patient Journey, cases where people with negative blood tests and biopsies benefit from a gluten-free diet.

    What do you think? Is non-celiac gluten-sensitivity a real condition? Do you or anyone you know come up negative on blood tests and biopsies, but suffer from gluten-sensitivity? How should doctors proceed? Share your comments below.

    Source:

    • Open Original Shared Link


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    Guest Gryphon

    Posted

    I'm not sure why a site whose very publication is titled Journal of Gluten Sensitivity would be asking this question. Was your publication renamed to that name just to get more non-celiac readers, not because you, in fact, did believe that gluten sensitivity is real? Your publication certainly has many, many articles about non-celiac gluten sensitivity. It's disappointing to see the reality of gluten sensitivity questioned here. It makes me wonder if this article is yet another one that has a title and subject just to stir folks up and attract attention.

    Evidence would suggest that non-celiac gluten sensitivity is real (and we would agree that it is) but believe it or not, it's still a point of debate in scientific circles.

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    Guest Karen

    Posted

    I believe it exists. My son is a prime example. He was diagnosed very young with ADHD. After talking to a friend I had allergy testing done on him. He reacted to 29 different foods! We took them all out of his diet. All his ADHD symptoms completely disappeared.He was suddenly the typical 5 year old boy. After about a year, we started slowly adding things back in, one at a time. 5 years later, the only things we can not add back in are Gluten, Casein and Soy. As soon as he ingests any of those 3, all the ADHD symptoms come back, the tantrums and meltdowns, the inability to sit still or concentrate, the horrendous and painful gas issues and the "Allergy Shiners" and headaches.

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    Guest Shirley Braden

    Posted

    Evidence would suggest that non-celiac gluten sensitivity is real (and we would agree that it is) but believe it or not, it's still a point of debate in scientific circles.

    Gryphon--Thank you for replying as a spokesperson for celiac.com. I'm certainly glad that your organization does believe that gluten sensitivity is real. I just wish this article had not been written in such a way that the reality of gluten sensitivity is still questionable. I, and others who do not have a celiac diagnosis, are disturbed when we see articles that appear to give credence to gluten sensitivity not being real. Most of us have been down long and difficult paths to be gluten free and finally recovering from our symptoms and we're ready to be accepted/acknowledged/supported by the medical and gluten-free community. We want more of yes, gluten sensitivity is real and here's why vs a further "muddying of the waters" as I see this article doing. I can see showing that there are dissenting viewpoints among the members of the medical community still, but not necessarily presenting them as "legitimate" per se. In addition to Dr. Fasano's and others' studies cited on gluten sensitivity, even back in the 2008/2009 issue of Living Without, Dr. Stefano Guandilini (University of Chicago Celiac Disease Center and North American Society for the Study of Celiac Disease) stated that "There's a lot of research going on in this area, including in our lab at the University of Chicago Celiac Disease Center. The data is preliminary but suffice it to say that research is now revealing that changes do occur in the intestines of gluten-sensitive patients when they ingest gluten. More will be uncovered about this in the future." My point is that there has been some acknowledgment of the reality of non-celiac gluten sensitivity from the experts for some time, whether or not the entire medical community--the same community that is doing such a poor job of diagnosing the much more "accepted" celiac disease, I might add--accepts it as fact (celiac.com's wording).

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    Guest Shirley Braden

    Posted

    Clarification--That was the Aug/Sept 2009 issue of Living Without (the Q&A with Dr. Guandalini section) from which I extracted Dr. Guandalini's quote.

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    Guest Shannon

    Posted

    Dr. Fasano proved that non-celiac gluten sensitivity existed. Why are you suggesting it doesn't? There isn't a question.

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    Guest Barbie M

    Posted

    My tests, genetic testing and biopsy were negative and I was told I possibly could not have celiac disease. I had dermatitis similar to herpes rash which went away on the gluten-free diet. My father is gluten sensitive, and my father's mother's sister died of celiac disease. I am extremely sensitive. 7 years on gluten-free diet. I think scientific community have not found all the right genetic markers yet.

    When the drug makers find a way to make money on the gluten intolerant, you will see a miraculous turnaround in how the medical community is then given a reason to accept gluten intolerance as a real diagnosis. I was told, and I quote, "I cannot accept your condition as celiac if you have not been diagnosed by a colleague." Back then the testing was grossly inadequate. The drop in blood pressure, the disappearance of arthritis, the ability to keep food down, the elimination of rashes and hives, the lack of muscle cramping and restless leg syndrome, the bloating, gas and cramps, etc. None of it had any bearing or consideration with this doctor. I eliminated him as my physician and have only been sick enough to require a doctor twice in 7 years. I do not exaggerate. Thank you.

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    Guest Jennifer

    Posted

    It is incorrect to say there is no bio-marker. The doctors just haven't found the bio-marker yet. A strep test would show negative for celiac, and that would not disprove the existence of celiac. It just shows the strep test is the wrong test for celiac disease. I think the doctors make the mistake of applying only the celiac tests- and then when those come back negative in some people reacting to gluten, they then say non-celiac gluten sensitivity is a non-entity. The logic is fatally flawed. Yes we know the regular allergy and celiac tests don't pick it up. But come over to my house and you will see the evidence (my two children, one celiac, one non-celiac gluten sensitive, both have explosive diarrhea when they ingest even small amounts of gluten -- and NOT when their food is gluten-free). Why not base a test on that? I'm sure there are other potential bio-markers being missed as well.

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    Guest Ruth

    I had exactly the same experience: diagnosed as a non celiac, however while waiting for the results of the test I tried a gluten-free diet and had tangible results within 2 weeks. I believe that there is something wrong with the testing.

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    Guest GG
    2 years ago I did a stool test through Enterolab. The results were borderline sensitive, I would say. But I stopped eating gluten and my hot flashes went away, as did joint pain and stomach pain with diarrhea. I cannot eat anything with gluten, and if I accidentally get glutened, I get very sick now. After I took a round of antibiotics, it has taken over a month to recover from gluten symptoms and reaction. I have no one but me and the Internet to learn what is going on. Doctors in my state of Colorado are clueless. Research papers and this website have helped so much.

    I am a doctor in Aurora and have studied gluten sensitivity for years.

    It is real and one of the causes of "leaky gut". Leaky gut may predispose to gluten sensitivity and vice versa.

     

    We are doing a story this month on Channel 31 Denver re: gluten

     

    Best wishes for a healthy life.

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    Guest Blake

    Posted

    All of a sudden, at the age of 50, I started to have very serious reactions to things I was eating. They were always following the same scenario, with the bottom line being: I could not keep food in. After some testing and some more testing I was declared healthy and "would find out what not to eat". I had lost more than 40 pounds in 3 years and was afraid to go anywhere, or eat anything. A move to a different state and an alternative way of looking at my "non-problems" health situation suggested that I had a severe intolerance to gluten. I am following a strict gluten-free diet and am happy to report that doing so has eliminated all of my problems. I get occasionally glutened when I eat out and know it within 30 minutes. It is the same old scenario. So, for me, I know that I have a real condition. I would like doctors to take this condition seriously.

    How did you feel when you were sick? What were your symptoms?

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    Guest Wanda

    Posted

    Lots of great information here. I have had an odd problem with certain breads but not all. When I eat flour tortillas, certain English muffins, certain bagels, I get immediate stomach pain that lasts for about an hour. Anyone else with similar experience? I avoid those foods.

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    Guest kathryn

    Posted

    I have a 2.5 year old son with profuse diarrhea for 6 months, DQ8 positive, selective IgA deficiency, and drop in weight from 50th to 5th percentile with the diarrhea. He complained day and night of "tummy sick mummy." His twin sister is fine and a solid 50th percentile across the board.

     

    Visual endoscopy showed diffuse duodenal inflammation and edema, biopsies completely negative. Gluten-free diet has resolved all symptoms, he is happy, (everyone, even his music and art teacher have commented he is like a new little boy), and has gained 2 pounds in 2 weeks and is eating everything in sight.

    I cringe at the thought of reintroducing gluten (or wheat associated fructans if that is indeed the problem) as we did a gluten reintroduction trial a few weeks ago with diarrhea and abdominal pain misery ensuing.

     

    On one hand I think (and our family doctor does too) that I must be completely insane (no there is no family history of mental illness and I love my gluten as much as the next person and am not particularly loving the gluten-free options - and I am not seeking out attention by using my son's illness -in fact I delayed seeking medical attention for him for months out of fear I would be labelled one of those crazy mothers...) On the other hand, the objective improvement in abdominal pain and diarrhea are not subtle.

    I should mention I am a physician (nephrologist) and the scientist in me is cringing that my mum-observations do not align with the pathology (or lack thereof). But I also recognize as a physician that many conditions we currently acknowledge were "figments of people's imaginations" 20 years ago. A recent randomized trial in the well respected Am J Gastroenterology appears to confirm the symptoms complex as a real entity, which is the only thing making me feel a little less crazy.

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  • 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

     


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