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Medical Viewpoint Comparison


mftnchn

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mftnchn Explorer

I found this helpful, anybody else seen it?

Open Original Shared Link


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ravenwoodglass Mentor

This was quite interesting once I figured out how to make the print large enough to see. Thanks for posting this info.

Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

Fantastic!

Maybe Scott could add this chart to www.celiac.com????

Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

Fantastic!

Maybe Scott could add this chart to www.celiac.com????

(Whoops, sorry, computer freak-out)

VydorScope Proficient
Fantastic!

Maybe Scott could add this chart to www.celiac.com????

I would think before he did that he would need some strong solid evidence its based on real facts... I know I would before I put it on my site. :)

jerseyangel Proficient

That is really good! Thanks :)

burdee Enthusiast
I found this helpful, anybody else seen it?

Open Original Shared Link

Thanks for this link. I'll share that with my local celiac disease support group.

BURDEE


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Nancym Enthusiast

I get an error when trying to view it, an encryption error. :(

nora-n Rookie
I get an error when trying to view it, an encryption error. :(

I can see it fine, I have acrobat7.

You might want to download focit pdf viewer (is not so picky and can open encrypted pdf's and is small insize, opens faster) (there is a plugin with which yu can make pdf's. both are free)

nora

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    • Jordan23
      Ok so know one knows about cross reactions from yeast,corn, potatoes, eggs, quinoa ,chocolate, milk, soy, and a few more I forgot.  There all gluten free but share a similar structure to gluten proteins. I use to be able to eat potatoes but now all of a sudden I was stumped and couldn't figure it out when I got shortness of breath like I was suffocating.  Then figured it out it was the potatoes.  They don't really taste good anyways. Get the white yams and cherry red 🍠 yams as a sub they taste way better. It's a cross reaction! Google foods that cross react with celiacs.  Not all of them you will cross react too. My reactions now unfortunately manifest in my chest and closes everything up . Life sucks then we die. Stay hopeful and look and see different companies that work for you . Lentils from kroger work for me raw in the bag and says nothing about gluten free but it works for me just rinse wellllll.....don't get discouraged and stay hopeful and don't pee off god
    • K6315
      Hi Lily Ivy. Thanks for responding. Did you have withdrawal? If so, what was it like and for how long?
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @Doris Barnes! You do realize don't you that the "gluten free" label does not mean the same thing as "free of gluten"? According to FDA regulations, using the "gluten free" label simply means the product does not contain gluten in excess of 20 ppm. "Certified Gluten Free" is labeling deployed by an independent testing group known as GFCO which means the product does not contain gluten in excess of 10 ppm. Either concentration of gluten can still cause a reaction in folks who fall into the more sensitive spectrum of the celiac community. 20 ppm is safe for most celiacs. Without knowing how sensitive you are to small amounts of gluten, I cannot speak to whether or not the Hu Kitechen chocolates are safe for you. But it sounds like they have taken sufficient precautions at their factory to ensure that this product will be safe for the large majority of celiacs.
    • Doris Barnes
      Buying choclate, I recently boght a bar from Hu Kitchen (on your list of recommended candy. It says it is free of gluten. However on the same package in small print it says "please be aware that the product is produced using equipment that also processes nuts, soy, milk and wheat. Allergen cleans are made prior to production". So my question is can I trust that there is no cross contamination.  If the allergy clean is not done carefully it could cause gluten exposure. Does anyone know of a choclate brand that is made at a facility that does not also use wheat, a gluten free facility. Thank you.
    • trents
      @Manaan2, have you considered the possibility that she might be cross reacting to some food or foods that technically don't contain gluten but whose proteins closely resemble gluten. Chief candidates might be dairy (casein), oats (avenin), soy, corn and eggs. One small study showed that 50% of celiacs react to CMP (Cow's Milk Protein) like they do gluten.
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