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Gluten allergy a growing problem in U.S., study shows






By Josephine Marcotty

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)


MINNEAPOLIS -- A Minnesota study using frozen blood samples taken from Air Force recruits 50 years ago has found that intolerance to wheat gluten, a debilitating digestive condition, is four times more common today than it was in the 1950s.

The findings contradict the prevailing belief that a sharp increase in diagnoses of wheat gluten intolerance has come about because of greater awareness and detection, and raises questions about whether dramatic changes in the American diet have played a role.

"It's become much more common," said Dr. Andrew Murray, the Mayo Clinic gastroenterologist who led the study. No one knows why, he said, but one reason might be rapid changes in eating habits and food processing over the last half century.

"Fifty years is way too fast for human genetics to have changed," Murray said. "Which tells us it has to be a pervasive environmental influence."

Researchers at the Mayo Clinic and the University of Minnesota who conducted the study also found that the recruits who had the undiagnosed digestive condition, called Celiac disease, also had a four-fold increase in the risk of death.

Today an estimated 1 out of 100 people suffer from the inherited disorder, though most of the time people don't know they have it.

The disease occurs in people whose bodies cannot digest gluten, a protein found in wheat, rye and barley. The undigested protein triggers the body's immune system to attack the lining of the small intestine, causing diarrhea, nausea, and abdominal pain. Though people live with it for many years, over time it destroys the lining of the small intestine, leading to an inability to absorb nutrients such as iron and calcium. That, in turn, causes serious conditions, including anemia, osteoporosis and even infertility in both men and women.

The only treatment is a gluten-free diet -- no wheat, rye or barley.

Murray said he initiated the study to find out whether the disease is on the rise, and whether it had long-term health consequences if undiagnosed and untreated.

He turned to medical archeology to find the answers -- a treasure-trove of blood samples taken from recruits at the Warren Air Force base in Cheyenne, Wyo., between 1948 and 1954. At the time, strep infections were raging among the recruits, mostly young men on their way to fight in the Korean war. Doctors there drew the samples as part of a now-famous study that proved treating the infections with antibiotics would prevent rheumatic fever, a serious heart ailment that can follow strep throat.

One of the doctors in that study took some of the samples with him when he moved the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio. When he decided to retire two decades ago, he asked Dr. Edward Kaplan, a strep specialist at the University of Minnesota, to become their guardian. The vials were transported in frozen-pizza delivery trucks to Minneapolis, where they reside today.

"Nobody has anything like it," said Kaplan. "There are other collections, but none go back this far."

In 2000 they were used to help resolve an intense debate among researchers over whether Hepatitis C infection was a certain death sentence, or whether many people could live with it for years.

Murray used a similar design for the study on Celiac disease, published today in the journal Gastroenterology. He tested more than 9,133 samples for the antibodies that proved the recruits had Celiac disease; 43, or about one out of 652, had the disease. He then tested blood samples from groups of men from Olmsted County, more than 12,000 in all. In an older group of men, one in 121 tested positive, and in the younger group one in 106 tested positive, an increase of four to four-and-a-half times.

His findings raise questions about why the number of people with the disease has grown so fast. But rates of other immune diseases have also increased a lot. One theory is that modern, clean living, which has resulted in fewer infections, parasites and microbes in our bodies, causes the immune system to turn on healthy tissue instead. Or it may also be the modern diet, Murray said.

"The types of food we eat now are different," he said.


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My 5 year old daughter was diagnosed with Celiac Disease at the age of 3. Even today, it is a very difficult diet to follow. It requires reading every ingredient on every label. I really think the food companies need to be more proactive in advertising their Gluten free porducts.

Posted by: Celiac Mom | Jul 07, 2009
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I have this..and it sucks. I wish they would find a pill so i could eat things..I was diagnosed 7 years ago and it was painful now people are aware of this and food is easily found but expensive and nasty. it really takes a lot to do ..you just cant run out and eat..you have to be careful.....

Posted by: one who tries to be gluten free | Jul 06, 2009
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I suffered with this for many, many years before being diagnosed. I was told it was "just" IBS. I had two partial colectomies (portions of my colon removed) that perhaps could have been avoided had this been found sooner. It isn''t a fun diet to adhere to- but I feel 100% better!

Posted by: Newbiesillyak | Jul 06, 2009
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You are the biggest silly Ac that I know

Posted by: anonymous | Jul 07, 2009
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I have it, as well. Although it is no fun, I am glad to finally know what has been bothering me for so long, and I am glad that it is not something unmanageable. I just have to add this: how ironic is it, that the blood samples were transported in pizza trucks. Hilarious - regular pizza is banned in the Celiac''s gluten-free diet.

Posted by: GF employee of Clinic | Jul 06, 2009
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My friend also suffers the same as you. And I'm finding ways to help him. I just wish I could. I'm searching the internet and I found this one. http://www.allergy-treatments.net I hope the medicines in here can help him.

Posted by: anonymous | Jul 06, 2009
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I WISH HILLCREST HOSPITAL WOULD OFFER SOME GLUTEN FREE ITEMS FOR EMPLOYEES WHO ALSO HAVE CELIAC DISEASE BEING A PATIENT HER FOR THREE DAYS I HAD TO HAVE FOOD BROUGHT IN FROM MY DAUGHTER BECAUSE THE HOSPITAL COULD NOT ACCOMMODATE MY DIET. AS AN EMPLOYEE OF HILLCREST I CAN NOT UNDERSTAND WHY THEY CANT HAVE A LITTLE CORNER IN THE CAFETERIA FOR THOSE OF US WITH CELIAC DISEASE FOR I KNOW I AM NOT THE ONLY ONE.

Posted by: anonymous | Jul 07, 2009
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I second that!

Posted by: anonymous | Jul 07, 2009
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Having gluten free offerings at the Cleveland Clinic cafes should be a top priority. Not only are they healthier choices for those with ciliac, but for those with other health issues as well. Arthritis, Candida Albicones, Obesity, Diabetes, and fibromialgia just to name a few.
I am also aware of people that do not have any of these but still follow a gluten free diet.
There should also be accomodations for those who do not ingest yeast and processed sugar, cane juice, and other sweeteners.
Thank you for you attention to these very important dietary concerns.

Posted by: Rebecca Wehr | Jul 07, 2009
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I''m curious about the math involved. 1 of 121 equals 0.826% of the subjects positive. 1 of 106 equals 0.943% positive subjects, an increase of 0.117%. Flipping the numbers to subjects testing negative, the numbers went from 99.17% negative to 99.06% negative. Although the problem is real for those testing positive, are the results overstated at 4 - 4.5 times increase in positives?

And for those who are positive, check the Trader Joes website. They list all of their gluten free products and are reasonably priced.

Posted by: Not Fooled By Statistics | Jul 07, 2009
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"Not fooled by statistics"? Sorry, but I think you mis-read the facts. The rate of coeliac disease went from 1 in 652 in the 1950s, to 1 in 106 or so nowadays.

I calculate that the increase in coeliac disease they detected is actually MORE than the fourfold increase. Actually it seems to mean that it is six times more common on blood testing now than it was then.

That''s a spectacular increase.

Posted by: Another Irish Coeliac | Jul 08, 2009
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It seems to me, since I meet people so often who have celiac, that the stats must be much higher. How about all the undiagnosed cases? I truly "get" that it is severely greater STRESS, compounded over years, plus bad diets. But if you dissect a bad diet, what does it look like? BEFORE it becomes a McDonald''s hamburger bun (and let''s not get started about the quality of "USDA inspected" meat), grains and crops raised in depleted soil, laden with pesti/fungi/herbicides, watered with chemical laden soup (PCB''s, xenoestrogen containing plastic residue, jet fuel, etc. etc.) so that even what''s labeled ''organic'' isn''t really anymore. This is a systemic and microcosmic reflection of the inability of our planet (Gaia) to digest the crap we throw at her.....then look at Monsanto genetically modified seeds, material and radically illegal policies infringing on the few remaining farmers who try to stay in business with healthy, whole, non GMO seed. Please go see "Food, Inc." if you haven''t already. There are many factors involved with Celiac''s rampant increase and I contend that only a diet as pure as nature intended will help us get through the current intensity.
BTW, finding out I have celiac changed my life: I was about to lose a kidney AND my uterus (fibroids--women: heads up!) because of incredible inflammation and sclerosis in my body...did the head of their respective departments at one of the nation''s top teaching hospitals even DREAM of asking me what my DIET is like, before offering to preform surgery? I kept my organs, thank you, marched over to my naturopath, who found the culprit. I''ve lost a lot of weight and am now healthy and happy, as long as I stay away from gluten.

Posted by: CF from Portland, OR | Jul 09, 2009
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