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    Should Doctors Recommend a Gluten-Free Diet for All Elderly Celiac Patients?

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    A new UK study documents sharply rising celiac disease rates in the elderly, but stops short of recommending a gluten-free diet. Why? 

    Should Doctors Recommend a Gluten-Free Diet for All Elderly Celiac Patients? - Image: CC BY 2.0--Nicolas Alejandro Street Photography
    Caption: Image: CC BY 2.0--Nicolas Alejandro Street Photography

    Celiac.com 04/05/2021 - Celiac disease is highly under diagnosed in the elderly population, partly because it can vary so widely in its presentations, and partly because doctors lack awareness of the potential for celiac disease in older patients. 

    A team of researchers recently set out to assess the outcomes for an elderly population with celiac disease, and to compare the results with younger adults with celiac disease.

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    The research team included Mohamed G Shiha, Lauren J Marks, and David S. Sanders. They are variously affiliated with the Academic Unit of Gastroenterology, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, United Kingdom. 

    For their study, the team prospectively recruited newly diagnosed celiac patients from the Coeliac Specialist Clinic at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, between 2008 and 2017. All patients showed villous atrophy on biopsy after positive celiac serology. The team also recruited the patients retrospectively from 1990 to 2008 to determine the trend in elderly celiac diagnostic frequency over time.

    Six-hundred forty-four celiac patients were recruited prospectively, and 961 retrospectively, for a total of 1,605 patients. Of these, 208 patients (13.0%) were over the age of 65 years, when diagnosed between 1990 and 2017. 

    The percentage of elderly celiac diagnoses rose from zero percent in 1990-1991 to nearly twenty percent in 2016-2017. Younger patients more often presented with fatigue and gastrointestinal symptoms including diarrhea, abdominal pain, and IBS-type symptoms, while older patients more frequently showed B12 deficiency.

    Celiac disease rates in the elderly have risen sharply over the last twenty years, but elderly patients tend to present with fewer symptoms, which would seem to be a good argument for treating these patients with a standard gluten-free diet.

    However, the researchers contend that "the benefits of diagnosing celiac disease in the elderly may be contentious," and that more research is needed to determine whether a strict gluten-free diet in these patients is helpful or burdensome. 

    Really? So, maybe we shouldn't put these folks on a gluten-free diet because it might be "burdensome?" It's hard to imagine a research team making a similar statement about virtually any other auto-immune condition. Can you imagine a reputable doctor saying that maybe we should not use insulin to treat diabetes in elderly patients because it might be burdensome? Especially with zero data to back the idea? But that's what the team says, which comes across as a personal bias not based on science.

    With all of the known associated conditions and potential damage of untreated celiac disease, even asymptomatic celiac disease, it is frankly perplexing that any researcher would say this.

    Gluten-free food is more diverse and widely available than ever before. The idea that eating gluten-free is some sort of unnecessary burden, and that celiac disease should be left untreated seems dubious, and not based on any scientific research or data.

    What benefits can be claimed in allowed celiac disease to go untreated, even if it's asymptomatic. The odds of long-term damage are just too great. 

    The proper conclusion to a study that shows such a dramatic rise in celiac disease rates should probably be to call for proper treatment and follow-up of these individuals. What do you think?

    Read more at Gastroenterol Hepatol Bed Bench. 2020 Winter; 13(1): 37–43.


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    trents
    42 minutes ago, Ricky B said:

    I was just diagnosed less than a year ago at age 71. It all began with blood clots that traveled to my lungs. My doctor at the time did not know why the blood clots happened and I was insistent on trying to find out why. My other symptoms were abdominal swelling, fatigue, body aches and headaches. Among many other tests, I had the Celiac Panel test and was a weak positive (6) on the (tTG) Iga. Everything else was negative. I could not have the biopsy because I am on blood thinners for the clots. I do not have the results back on the genetic test yet. As to the article, I started on the gluten free diet immediately because I wanted to feel better. After 3 months I was still having symptoms although somewhat better, so I began the AIP diet and I could really tell the difference in my energy and digestion. I am completely off the acid reflux medication after 7 years. Although the diet is “burdensome”, I would rather live the rest of my life, however long that may be, productive and healthy. It definitely is a choice people should be given. 

    Ricky, are you saying the doctor concluded your pulmonary clots were caused by celiac disease? I have not heard that before. I was diagnosed with celiac disease almost 20 years ago but like you about 10 years ago I developed emboli in both lungs. This led to the discovery of a genetic clotting disorder called factor five leiden. It had nothing to do with my celiac disease. Pulmonary blood clots usually start with clots in the lower legs. Have you looked into compression stockings?

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    CMCM

    Ricky, good job on the dietary approach.....even with a solid celiac diagnosis your current diet would be the solution anyway.  Whether you have actual celiac disease or whether it's gluten sensitivity without celiac, diet is the solution and the "cure", so to speak.  As you have found, gluten isn't usually the only problem and it becomes a matter of tracking down all the food offenders to get truly better.  The diet is sometimes a nuisance, for sure, but it's a gazillion times better than feeling terrible, being sick, having GERD etc. and having to constantly swallow medicines that may hurt you in other ways. 

    The genetic test will be informative in the sense that it will reveal if you have a celiac gene as well as gluten sensitivity pattern genes, and that will be a confirmation that you at least have a predisposition to these gluten problems.  I'm 71 myself, and it has taken the last 3 months on a not only gluten free, but also a grain free (all grains!), dairy free, and sugar free diet as well as avoiding certain vegetables that I know are problematic.  I've felt increasingly better over 3 months, but have realized only the last week or two that I feel really really GOOD finally.  I will never go back to my previous way of eating, and at this point, I'm very content to eat this way despite the restrictions.  Feeling good is so much more important than  eating foods that make me increasingly sick.  I like that Hippocrates quote:  “Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food”.  In our case, the medicine is the RIGHT foods.

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    Oldturdle

    On the AIG diet, were you ever able to add food groups back?  I read a little about the diet on the internet, and it sounds like a good, but "burdensome," place to start for people who do not respond to a simple gluten free diet.

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    Scott Adams was diagnosed with celiac disease in 1994, and, due to the nearly total lack of information available at that time, was forced to become an expert on the disease in order to recover. In 1995 he launched the site that later became Celiac.com to help as many people as possible with celiac disease get diagnosed so they can begin to live happy, healthy gluten-free lives.  He is co-author of the book Cereal Killers, and founder and publisher of the (formerly paper) newsletter Journal of Gluten Sensitivity. In 1998 he founded The Gluten-Free Mall which he sold in 2014. Celiac.com does not sell any products, and is 100% advertiser supported.


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