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  • Kelly Carter
    Kelly Carter

    May is Celiac Awareness Month—Come Join the Celebration!

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Until the early 2000's, celiac disease was thought of as a disease discovered in childhood that could be outgrown.

    May is Celiac Awareness Month—Come Join the Celebration! - Wine tasting party. Image: CC BY 2.0--Fareham Wine
    Caption: Wine tasting party. Image: CC BY 2.0--Fareham Wine

    Celiac.com 05/14/2020 - May is Celiac Disease Awareness month. I'll be honest, I'm not sure how we got a whole month, but I'm happy we do. I use this month as a way to bombard my personal social media with facts, figures, memes, infographics, and anything else to let people know more about celiac disease. But really, before we get into the whole Celiac Disease Awareness month pomp and circumstance, I wanted to make an apology.

    Lately, I've been really hard on scientists studying celiac disease, and I've had some revelations that maybe I've been too hard on them.

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    Celiac disease has been around for millenia. Scientists have found evidence of the disease in ancient bones from Rome. The trigger for celiac was pieced together during bread shortages in World War II in the Netherlands. I want to believe that scientists know a lot about this disease. But I'm not confident that is a fair assumption.

    Until the early 2000's, celiac disease was thought of as a disease discovered in childhood that could be outgrown. Celiac was thought to be rare in the US, they didn't have the tools to look for celiac, and therefore doctors didn't even screen for celiac. When you talk to people diagnosed before 2005 or so, they will tell you that it was highly unusual to find someone with celiac disease. In the few people I've talked to diagnosed before 2005 or so, they will tell you it was years before they were diagnosed. Typically, they had a family member that was a doctor and did research to find this unusual disease. They will tell you they were diagnosed via endoscopy only because that is all that was available at the time.

    The Tissue Transglutaminase or TTG test was developed in 1997. In Gut magazine in 2000, scientists talk about the new TTG test and in the introduction they say, "Coeliac disease is one of the commonest underdiagnosed diseases in general practice." Wow! And that was only 20 years ago they were talking about celiac being common and underdiagnosed.

    Now you have a disease that can be easily screened for and an easy cure—simply eliminate gluten from the diet and all will be well. Gluten is what causes the damage to the small intestine—so removing it should solve the problem.

    GMO's, Paleo diets, and  gluten-free diets are all the dieting rage in the early 20-teens. Gluten-free foods are the fastest growing segment of the food industry. Gluten-free labels start to appear on everything—gluten-free or not until the FDA limits the use of the  gluten-free label and requires food manufacturers to list the top 8 allergens in clear bold print on the label for all to see. Wheat is considered one of the top 8 allergens, but the remaining gluten allergens, like barley and rye, are not required to be listed.

    Non-celiac gluten sensitivity starts to enter the lexicon. This is where someone has a reaction to gluten but tests negative for celiac disease. It is a controversial diagnosis of exclusion as there is no test to confirm NCGS. Food allergy tests also come into vogue during this time. All gluten containing grains are a part of these test and many people show "reactivity" to gluten containing grains. Further fueling the demand for  gluten-free foods.

    In the second half of the 20-teens, drug companies start to realize that this celiac disease might be a gold mine. It is an underserved community with absolutely ZERO pharmacological interventions available for those with celiac disease. The  gluten-free diet should cure the disease. Drug companies realize that the  gluten-free diet is hard and that people want to be free to not deal with such a restrictive diet.

    Fast forward through the  gluten-free fad of the early 20-teens and we come to today, which is really where I wanted to get to anyway.

    I don't think we have a clear idea of what celiac disease is, what its long term effects are, how strict does a  gluten-free diet need to be to induce healing, and why do some heal on the diet while others move to refractory celiac disease. I think we know the trigger of celiac disease as the dietary consumption of gluten. But we don't know why only about 1% of the people with the genetic markers develop celiac. Scientists have conflicting information about the development of celiac in children regarding the timing of introduction of gluten, breast feeding vs. bottle feeding, and other things. In Sweden there was a huge spike in celiac diagnosis for children born in the 1980's through early 1990's, but they don't know why.

    I consistently see studies discussing that no matter how hard we try, it is virtually impossible to eliminate gluten 100% from our diets. My answer is duh, but obviously scientists didn't know. I think they thought it was easy to eliminate gluten from the diet. I think they are slowly realizing how much attempting a  gluten-free diet affects people health-wise, socially, and economically. I see studies that show that people with celiac disease have a shortened lifespan and others that say that once a gluten-free diet is initiated all risk factors for a shortened lifespan return to normal levels. Let's not even discuss those that move onto refractory celiac disease. I've decided they don't know for sure about the long term consequences of celiac...gluten-free diet or not.

    My bottom line in all of this very long diatribe, is that they've only really been studying celiac disease for about 20 years. In northern Europe, they have more historical data on celiac than anywhere else, but it is still pretty scant and incomplete. But I've decided we have to give these scientists a break. They are working hard to crack the mysteries of celiac disease. Although I'm disappointed at where we are in the research today, I'm hopeful that we will make significant discoveries in the next 20 years of ongoing research to provide answers to those suffering from gluten-related diseases.

    But, today, and all this month, is Celiac Disease Awareness Month, so let's put all of these worries behind us and let the world know about celiac disease!

    Edited by Scott Adams


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    Guest Steeeve

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    Nice article! Thx celiac!

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  • About Me

    Kelly Carter

    I was diagnosed with Celiac in 2012 and have been gluten free ever since.  I live in Atlanta with my husband and two medium sized children.  I run a blog at FatCeliac.net that covers real life issues with celiac disease, upcoming drug trials, and try to be a reliable source of information for the celiac community.


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