Today’s AJC has a story regarding celiac disease as well as gluten sensitivity. Gluten a problem or a fad?
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Today’s AJC has a story regarding celiac disease as well as gluten sensitivity. Gluten a problem or a fad?
Related posts from this blog:
Gluten free is big business. In a range of conditions, eliminating gluten has been advocated to improve symptoms. The most frequent problem in which a gluten-free diet (GFD) may be beneficial is irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). A selected summary in Gastroenterology discusses this topic (Gastroenterology 2012; 142: 664-73).
This review highlights an article that showed improvement in a double-blind randomized trial (Am J Gastroenterol 2011; 106: 508-14) & then reviews the topic more broadly. The study is the first randomized controlled trial that suggests that nonceliac IBS patients may improve with a GFD. The study looked at 34 patients with IBS who had improved with a GFD & had no evidence of celiac disease (either negative HLA-DQ2/DQ8 or duodenal biopsy). Then 19 patients had 16g of gluten per day reintroduced; control patients were offered equivalent food that was gluten-free. The gluten products in the study were free of fermentable oligo-, di-, monosaccharides and polyols to avoid confounders (What to make of FODMAPs). The patients who continued a GFD had less reported pain, bloating and tiredness. The GFD group reported good control of symptoms the previous week in 68% vs. 40% in the study group.
The commentary notes that ‘gluten sensitivity’ is big business, accounting for 1.3 billion in 2011 expenditures. Companies like General Mills, Betty Crocker, PF Chang’s, and Subway are offering gluten-free choices. Since immune activation and low-grade inflammation may be important for IBS, it is possible that some foods trigger these processes. At the same time, individuals with reported gluten sensitivity have not been shown to have increased intestinal permeability; this is in contrast to celiac disease (BMC Med 2011; 9; 23).
There may be more patients with IBS who will benefit from a GFD due to gluten sensitivity than patients with celiac disease.
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