Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com!
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Gluten And Allergen Cross Contamination In "gluten Free" Foods


Tarrenae

Recommended Posts

Tarrenae Rookie

Hi everyone I was wondering what the laws were regarding food labeling products gluten free,I have been using the Nana's no gluten cookies but see where it says made in a facility that manufacters products containg wheat,peanuts and tree nuts.How then can the product be gluten free?You can view the companies website here--->Open Original Shared Link

It is very important I find out what I am consuming that is causing me to break out in sores and hives and feel terrible..shopping for allergen foods is so frustrating because of the cross contamination issue!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Guest kivmom3

i have those cookies as well but will not eat them in fear of them being "contaminated". I got them as a gift from someone who was trying to help me out. I've been giving them to my kids who so far are negative for celiac. I will only buy things that are not manufactured around wheat to avoid the cross contamination. I can't eat Amy's products for that same reason.

One note though, I've just been diagnosed 6 weeks ago so i may still be healing, but I would just rather be safe than sorry.

There are alot of other cookies out there. Enjoy life has some good ones and you can always try Pamela's or make your own. Whole foods has a gluten-free bakery as well. I'd get rid of the Nano's if they are making you sick, not worth it if there are other choices out there :)

Gg

Link to comment
Share on other sites
tarnalberry Community Regular

Do you ever allow a Twix bar in your house, or a bagel, or someone's leftover chinese food? Then your kitchen is "a facility that manufacters products containg wheat."

There are procedures for cleaning lines between runs and separating food ingredients to prevent cross contamination from allergens. You're probably saying "but how good is it really? don't they make mistakes?" Yeah, they probably do, and how good they are probably varies from plant to plant and manufacturer to manufacturer. So a shared facility isn't proof positive that there IS gluten in something with gluten free ingredients, but it's not a guarantee that there isn't either. It's a personal decison, and a learned one by figuring out what companies (and foodstuffs) you can trust.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
psawyer Proficient
Do you ever allow a Twix bar in your house, or a bagel, or someone's leftover chinese food? Then your kitchen is "a facility that manufacters products containg wheat."

Well said, Tiffany. My kitchen, indeed my whole house, is not "gluten free" since my wife has a few things containing wheat. We store them away from anything else, and on the bottom shelf due to the remote possibility of a spill falling. Oh, wait, we only have one counter, so not only is this "a facility that..." but it even would be "shared equipment."

After seven years gluten-free, I recently had another examination of my duodenum, including some biopsies. The GI doctor told me that he could find no evidence whatsoever of celiac--my recovery was total. So I guess I have survived the "contaminated" facility and equipment just fine. FWIW.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
jerseyangel Proficient
After seven years gluten-free, I recently had another examination of my duodenum, including some biopsies. The GI doctor told me that he could find no evidence whatsoever of celiac--my recovery was total.

That is such good news! :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
tom Contributor
It is very important I find out what I am consuming that is causing me to break out in sores and hives and feel terrible..shopping for allergen foods is so frustrating because of the cross contamination issue!

Have u considered that the issue might be intolerance to another food?

If the symptoms aren't constant, nothing will be more valuable than a food/symptom diary.

There is NO way I would've recovered w/out one, and I, for (woohoo!) an entire 7wks have been feeling better than since the early 70s, when I was a kid!!

Celiac, and complications like candida & leaky-gut, made me need to eliminate many many foods to feel good again. "Good" is such an understatement - fantastic is almost an understatement.

Re: food diary - nothing compares to being able to see what was eaten the day of (and for some ppl, a couple days prior) bad symptoms, and comparing it to, 3 wks ago when the symptoms were similar.

Patterns pop out.

Best of luck. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites
gfpaperdoll Rookie

and then there are people like me that will react to all gluten free grain foods, no matter whether made in a dedicated facility or not. Those Diamond Nut Thins are a huge no no for me.

heck, I even react to my own baked goods made in my own gluten-free house.

I am double DQ1, 3 years gluten-free/DF & bottom line is i just cannot eat grains, except for rice & corn.

well that is cooked rice - I also do not do well with rice flour.

even products made in a dedicated facility the grains have a certain amount of cross contamination...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Moustique77 Newbie

The only way to be absolutely sure that you are eating gluten free foods is to buy from companies like Ener-G, Kinnikinnick and Enjoy Life that have gluten free facilities. Especially if they test for gluten. Otherwise there is always a remote chance of cross contamination. I personally don't think that a product should be labeled gluten free if its not made in a gluten-free facility or not tested. It should state something like 'no added gluten'.

My wife is extremely strict with her diet and always buys from safe companies. She also bakes/cooks everything from scratch (or gets me to do it for her!). I'm not so strict and will take chances with companies that state made in a facility with wheat, etc. She did inform me that flour based ingredients have the chance to be airborne, plus how well a company keeps ingredients separated and cleans machines are factors for causing cc.

Its probably best in the early stages of the diet to be more strict and remove as many chances as possible for being glutened. There are lots of safe companies out there with breads, snacks, etc. to choose from. This also takes a lot of worry and stress out of eating. Later when the body has had a chance to recover and there is security with the diet can chances be taken with 'questionable' foods.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      121,049
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    jsalinas0313
    Newest Member
    jsalinas0313
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Katiec123
      @cristiana I’ve got an appointment with the midwife next week so will speak to her then. Waiting for gp to get back to me. I’ve made the decision today to cut gluten out regardless due to the risks I’ve read about 
    • cristiana
      Hi Katie I am so sorry you had two miscarriages in the past.  Try not to worry, though, because it could be that they were unrelated, perhaps? Well done for contacting your GP.  Is it possible that you can speak to your midwife in the meantime for a chat?    Cristiana  
    • Katiec123
      @cristiana hi!  the things I’ve read online about having untreated coeliac disease whilst pregnant has really scared me and made me very hesitant to continue eating it. I feel like the best option might be to eliminate gluten from my diet now and then continue with testing after I’ve given birth. I’ve got in touch with my gp and am due to get a phone call back on Monday. Really worried now as I’ve had 2 miscarriages in the past 
    • cristiana
      @Katiec123 Welcome to the forum. I started to have symptoms related to coeliac disease (mouth ulcers, aura migraines etc) but no gastric symptoms during my first pregnancy.  That went to term, in fact, I was 10 days over and had to be induced.  But my second baby, born 21 months later, arrived at 33 weeks.  He's now doing well, and taller than all of us - it was just an earlier than expected arrival! I agree, it would not be wise to eat gluten  if there is any suspicion that you have coeliac disease during a pregnancy.   It would of course be good to know for sure, one way or another, because I believe coeliacs receive extra monitoring during pregnancy in many countries.   I think it may be well worth asking your GP if you can be referred to a gastroenterologist for a formal diagnosis asap.   By the way you spell 'coeliac' I'm guessing you are posting from the UK?  If that is the case, the NHS may rush things along for you, I suspect they will.  If it appears that they cannot refer you urgently, if you have the money for a private consultation it might be well worth it, as there is a trend here in the UK (I'm British) to diagnose coeliacs without the need for an endoscopy if the blood test results are compelling. Sounds like this is the case for you.  If you can see a gastroenterologist privately s/he might be able to diagnose you there and then (make sure you take a printout of your blood tests). Generally, there is a lot of support for coeliacs through the NHS, with a nutritionist, annual reviews and blood tests to check for diet compliance and health related issues, DEXA scans to check bone density, extra vaccinations where indicated and in some areas, certain gluten free food available on prescription.  So for lots of reasons, if you can get a diagnosis it's worth it. I hope all goes well with your appointment, let us know how you get on.
    • Shireen32
      Hi , since being gluten free I am still having bad stomach problems . Such as constant gas in my stomach 24/7 ,burning, constant bubbling noises coming from my stomach and gurgling sounds that never stop .Pain under the left side of my rib cage when ever I eat and just always there’s pain there  .  My symptoms have not improved at all since being gluten free.  Could this be refractory coeliac disease ?? How is that even diagnosed or confirmed  ?  I had tests recently and this is what they say :Endomysial abs (IgA) -Positive  TTG abs (IgA)U/ml : My result is : 0.9 U/ml The Range:0 - 10 U/ml What does this mean pls ??? How can I still test positive for Endomysial abs when I am gluten free and am very careful about cross contamination? Do I even have coeliac disease I’m convinced some other digestive disorder is causing these symptoms .   I also have not had a endoscopy and now the gastroenterologist calls me after one year ( I’m from the uk and have free healthcare which has been such a nightmare with all this and never help me  )  so as I am gluten free the gastroenterologist advised me to start eating gluten again to be referred for a biopsy .. Is a biopsy even worth me doing ? The only proof I have is when I was eating gluten I could never get my ferretin , vitamin d and folate levels up . And since being gluten free these have gone up a little bit  . But that doesn’t always mean coeliac as I know gluten stops absorption in even normal people  . Pls can anyone shed some light it’s much needed ! And share some advice or answer my questions above . I have no idea with this whole coeliac stuff and am very much struggling .Much Appreciated .  
×
×
  • Create New...