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  • Celiac.com Sponsor: Review
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    How GliadinX Saved My Mom on Thanksgiving

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.
    How GliadinX Saved My Mom on Thanksgiving - Image: CC--TheCulinaryGeek
    Caption: Image: CC--TheCulinaryGeek

    Celiac.com 12/09/2017 - For those of you who haven't yet heard about GliadinX, it is a dietary supplement with the highest concentration of AN-PEP, Prolyl Endopeptidase (Aspergillus Niger), and, unlike other enzymes, these have been shown in studies to break down gluten in the stomach.

    I've been using them regularly for months, and I tend to take them whenever I eat out, or eat at a friend's house, so basically whenever I don't have control over my food's preparation. Since I began doing this I haven't had any incidents of upset stomach, which are my typical symptoms if I get any cross contamination. However, it is hard to prove a negative...after all, perhaps I haven't had any issues because all of the food I ate was 100% gluten-free...right?

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    I will now describe a recent glutening incident that involved none other than my Mother, who visited us this past Thanksgiving. How this could happen in my home, after all I'm the owner of Celiac.com, is an embarrassing but true story which I will share here in the hope that it will help you avoid my errors, and perhaps give you a way to recover should something similar ever happen.

    My brother brought over three pies for Thanksgiving dessert, one was a gluten-free apple pie, and the other two were pumpkin pies: one was gluten-free, but the other was not. What could go wrong, right? My brother's reasoning for bringing a non gluten-free pie into my house was pretty basic: several of the guests were not on a gluten-free diet, so he wanted to offer them what they were used to.

    What you need to know about my Mother is that she's very gluten sensitive. A tiny amount of gluten leaves her wrecked for days. I think you probably know where I'm going here, but basically everyone was busy socializing, eating, or cleaning while dessert was being served, and a friend grabbed a piece of the gluten-containing pumpkin pie (she assumed that if it was in MY house it was gluten-free) and handed it to my Mother. After she swallowed two bites we realized the mistake, but it was too late. My Mother had the look of horror on her face as she realized that the rest of her trip to California was probably ruined.

    I immediately flew into action and gave her several capsules of GliadinX, which she took with lots of water. We carried on with the evening, and I checked in with her over the next couple of hours. Amazingly she didn't have any noticeable symptoms or issues, but she was still certain that they were coming, and that she wouldn't get any sleep and would feel horrible the next day. Remarkably, none of her worries came true. She slept fine, and woke up feeling great. We were both amazed because any past similar incidents always ended badly for her.

    Suffice it to say that my Mother now keeps a bottle of GliadinX with her all the time...just in case!

    --by Scott Adams

    Many people have asked Celiac.com how they can order this product, so we've included a "Buy Now" link below to order them directly from the manufacturer:

    PayPal - The safer, easier way to pay online!

     

    Quote

     

    12. Treatment of the Extra-Intestinal Manifestations of CD

    ...the only one that is currently on the market is the gluten-specific enzyme, GliadinX (AN-PEP). Unfortunately, it is only capable of detoxifying 0.2 g of gluten or roughly that of 1/8 of a slice of gluten-containing bread. For this reason, it should only be used as an adjunct to the GFD when there are concerns for accidental gluten contamination and in an effort to ameliorate symptoms, not as a replacement for the GFD.

     

     

    Sources: Scientific publications on AN-PEP enzymes:



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    Guest Sherry

    Scott, I'm glad that it helped your mother.  May I ask if she has celiac disease or non-celiac gluten sensitivity?

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    Scott Adams

    There is no currently available test for NCGS, but she has self diagnosed celiac disease, so high antibody readings, but decided not to do the biopsy. She had severe symptoms most of her life, and after I was formally diagnosed she decided to go gluten-free right after the antibody tests, and all of her symptoms vanished for the first time in her life.

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