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Anyone Else Tired Of "celiac" Vs "gluten Sensitive"?


mhb

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Mother of Jibril Enthusiast

I had another thought about the genetic issue...

How about if we compare celiac disease to breast cancer for a moment?

Like celiac, there is a gene that increases your risk of developing breast cancer (BRCA1). However, not everyone who has this gene gets breast cancer... and not everyone who gets breast cancer has the gene. There are lots of other factors involved: exposure to environmental contaminants, diet, the balance of hormones in your body (birth control pills and HRT increase your risk), etc... What makes breast cancer so different from celiac disease is that the prevention and treatment are very different. Prevention involves eating a good diet, mammograms, breastfeeding, avoiding exposure to chemicals like dry cleaning solvents, etc... Treatment involves surgery, chemotherapy, and/or radiation... so it really matters if you have active breast cancer or not!

With celiac disease, prevention and treatment are the same... don't eat gluten.

Western medicine is VERY much built on the breast cancer model... identify diseases and treat them aggressively with drugs, surgery, etc... People with severe celiac disease are in a similar crisis and need aggressive treatment, but everyone else is on the "prevention" side of things... which is not the strong suit of Western medicine. No wonder so many people don't understand gluten intolerance or even celiac disease! If you have a first-degree relative with celiac or you know you have one of the genes, you should either stop eating gluten or commit to screening on a regular basis.

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      Hi Scott, yes I have had symptoms for years and this is the second GI I have seen and he could not believe I have never been tested. He called later today and I am scheduled for an endoscopy. Is there a way to tell how severe my potential celiac is from the results above? What are the chances I will have the biopsy and come back negative and we have to keep searching for a cause? 
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      "her stool study showed she had extreme reactions to everything achievement on it long course of microbials to treat that." The wording of this part of the sentence does not make any sense at all. I don't mean to insult you, but is English your first language? This part of the sentence sounds like it was generated by translation software.
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      What kind of stool test was done? Can you be more specific? 
    • mishyj
      Perhaps I should also have said that in addition to showing a very high response to gluten, her stool study showed that she had extreme reactions to everything achievement on it long course of microbials to treat that.
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