| |
Celiac
disease (CD) is also referred to as a gluten sensitive enteropathy
(GSE), gluten intolerance, or celiac sprue. It is considered
to be the most under-diagnosed common disease today, potentially
affecting 1 in every 133 people in the USA. It is a chronic,
inherited disease, and if untreated can ultimately lead to
malnutrition. Gluten intolerance is the result of an immune-mediated
response to the ingestion of gluten (from wheat, rye, and
barley) that damages the small intestine. Nutrients then quickly
passed through the small intestine, rather than being absorbed.
To develop
celiac disease (CD) three things must be present:
| |
1. |
you
must inherit the gene, |
| |
2. |
consume
gluten, and |
| |
3. |
have
the gene triggered. Common triggers may include stress,
trauma (surgeries, pregnancy, etc.), and viral infections.
Approximately 1 in 20 first-degree relatives could have
CD triggered in their lifetime. |
The disease
is permanent and damage to the small intestine will occur
every time you consume gluten, regardless if symptoms are
present.

Celiac
disease was once thought of a disease with only GI symptoms.
It is now recognized that the disease is a multi-symptom,
multi-system (organ) disease. Celiac disease also does not
routinely present with the 'textbook' symptoms that physicians
learn. More often it presents with symptoms that can mimic
other problems.
Most physicians
recognize the classic symptoms of celiac disease : diarrhea,
bloating, weight loss, anemia, chronic fatigue, weakness,
bone pain, and muscle cramps. Physicians may not be aware
that celiac disease frequently presents with other symptoms,
some that do not involve the small intestine. More often,
symptoms can include constipation, constipation alternating
with diarrhea, or premature osteoporosis. Overweight persons
may also have undiagnosed celiac disease. Children may exhibit
behavioral, learning or concentration problems, irritability,
diarrhea, bloated abdomen, growth failure, dental enamel defects,
or projectile vomiting. Others will have symptoms such as
rheumatoid conditions, chronic anemia, chronic fatigue, weakness,
migraine headaches, nerve problems such as tingling of hands
or difficulty walking, or other conditions that are unexplained
and/or do not respond to usual treatment. People may have
one or more of the above symptoms. Patients are frequently
misdiagnosed as having 'irritable bowel syndrome', 'spastic
colon/bowel', or Crohn's disease'.

Initial
screening for CD is a blood test taken by your physician.
The test can be referred to as a Celiac Panel or by the names
of the individual tests. To provide the most accurate information,the
blood test should include the following tests: anti-endomysial
antibody (lgA EMA) and anti-gliadin antibody (lgA & IgG),
and tissue transglutaminase (tTG IgA). These tests are very
sensitive and specific for celiac disease. A gastroenterologist
takes small intestine tissue biopsies if the results of the
antibody test(s) are positive or he/she has a strong suspicion
of CD. A biopsy showing damaged villi in the small intestine
is the first half of the 'Gold Standard' to diagnosing CD.
The second half of the 'Gold Standard' is improvement of health
with the gluten-free diet. It is possible, in some situations,
to have normal blood tests and still have celiac disease.

Strict
adherence to a gluten-free diet for life is the only treatment
currently available. This involves the elimination of wheat,
rye, barley, and derivatives of these grains from your diet.
Medication is not normally required, unless there is an accompanying
condition, e.g. osteoporosis, dermatitis herpetiformis, etc.
Thriving, showing improvement and return of health on the
gluten-free diet is the second half of the 'gold standard'
of being diagnosed with CD.
|