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
  • Record is Archived

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

    Dr. Rodney Ford M.D.
    Dr. Rodney Ford M.D.

    Dabbling with Gluten: Ten Steps to Zero

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Journal of Gluten Sensitivity Summer 2014 Issue

    Dabbling with Gluten: Ten Steps to Zero - Image: CC--mst7022
    Caption: Image: CC--mst7022

    Celiac.com 01/29/2015 - A concerned mum asked me, "Should I dabble with a gluten-free diet?" Well, that got me thinking. The answer is, "Yes! and no!" Experimentation is part of learning and living. We have to start somewhere in our pursuit of learning about gluten. So dabbling is a good start--but you need a plan, or else you will get nowhere and feel confused.

    Can you swim? If so, then you have likely been in a swimming pool. Can you remember dipping your toe into the water for the first time? Did you test the water and feel the temperature? Next you paddle with your feet. With increasing confidence, you wade up to your waist. But it is only after you immerse yourself fully in the water that you can begin to swim. Only then can you experience the freedom of the water. Simply put: without immersion you cannot swim.

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    So how is this swimming metaphor related to concerns about eating gluten? Can you just put your toe into gluten-free world and just lower your gluten intake a little bit, and hope to miraculously feel better? Or do you need gluten-free immersion? In my experience, most people who are gluten-sensitive need to avoid gluten totally - I call this gluten-zero. We all have to travel this road: from dabbling to immersion.

    Let's return to first experiences. The word "gluten" is such a new word to most people, that it takes quite a long time understand the intricacies of what it can do and how to avoid it. To make any progress, we need answers to lots of questions: What is gluten? Why does it make us sick? What foods is it found in? What symptoms can it cause? What tests are needed? Are you affected by gluten? Do you have celiac disease? How strict do you have to be? How long will it take for you to feel better? How long will you need to stay gluten-free? What about the rest of your family? What do you ask for when you go out for a meal? Can you eat take-outs? The answers to these questions will help you feel competent with gluten-free foods.

    We all start our gluten-free knowledge from naught - when we know nothing about it. We then become conscious that there is something called "gluten" in many of our everyday foods, and people are saying that eating it might not be good for us. This is when our dabbling begins. When you dip your toe into the gluten-free waters and start to learn about the health issues caused by gluten. You may wonder if this gluten-free thing is a sensible lifestyle to adopt. Is it something that you should notice and care about? Or should you just dismiss it as a fad?

    In my experience, once you have worked out that you might be gluten-sensitive, there are a number of steps to go through. I call them: "Ten steps to zero".

    1. Naive to gluten as causing a problem. Initially, you know nothing about gluten.
    2. Awareness. Then you hear about gluten and gluten-related illness and symptoms.
    3. Gluten conscious. Next you wonder if gluten might be affecting you and if you should stop eating it.
    4. Get tests. At this stage I recommend that you get some blood tests – it is important to make the distinction between celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity (however, the border between these entities is blurred (see "the blurred line" below). For my recommendation for blood tests see Open Original Shared Link
    5. Get diagnosed. If celiac disease is diagnosed by your tests (which may include endoscopy) you will need a lifelong gluten-free diet. If the blood tests are negative for celiac disease but positive to anti-gliadin-antibody or positive to Cyrex or Enterolab gluten results, then you should try a strict gluten-free diet for the next six months. (Be totally committed to gluten zero.) If all of your tests are negative, that still does not rule out gluten/wheat protein intolerances.
    6. Be committed. Make a commitment to change your food to totally gluten-free (I call this gluten-zero). Start learning about buying and preparing gluten-free food, and reading food labels and food allergen lists.
    7. Gluten challenge. If you do not have celiac disease, and if you remain unsure whether gluten is harmful to you, then eat gluten again and see if you get sick again (this gluten challenge can takes days or months to turn positive).
    8. Minimizing cross-contamination: Some people are extremely sensitive to gluten. Even a few gluten-crumbs can upset them. To understand all the issues see this link: Open Original Shared Link
    9. Eating out. Trusting other people to prepare and serve gluten-zero food requires learning and teaching of wait-staff, food handlers and chefs, including your families
    10. Gluten zero. You are now immersed in the gluten-free world: what I call living gluten-zero. You are now ready to teach others.

    In summary - at the start we all dabble as we start to learn. However, to get the most benefit from being gluten-free, you need to be immersed in zero gluten, lifelong. Without gluten-zero, you will not fully heal. See link: Open Original Shared Link.

    Written in the spirit of cooperation and knowledge sharing.



    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Guest Uncle Bruce

    Posted

    Decent road map to gluten-freedom.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Guest celiacMom

    Posted

    There should be a sentence at the beginning explaining this does not apply to all gluten sensitive people. Some are in such bad health when first learn gluten is THE problem, they need to go to zero immediately. This article gives impression we can all go from 10 to 0, that is not true; thus the article is misleading.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites
    Guest Tine Aarsen

    Posted

    I totally agree that it is better for celiac patients not to consume gluten. But 'zero gluten' is not the correct term in my opinion in this context. In fact, 'gluten-free' means 'low in gluten'. Because even gluten-free bread, flour and cookies contain tiny amounts of gluten, well below 20 ppm, but definitely more than 0 ppm. Celiac disease patients are supposed to be able to handle those tiny amounts of gluten without negative consequences. Damage to their intestines will usually happen when they consume more than 10 mg. of gluten a day, for a longer period of time. But the tolerance level differs. Some patients can eat 50 mg of gluten without adverse effects, and others get ill from 10 mg of gluten (Catassi, 2007). My 15 year old son becomes ill from 0,04 mg of gluten. This was proven by our Dutch governmental food safety organisation (Nederlandse Voedsel- en Warenautoriteit). He really follows a zero gluten diet, which means: nu gluten-free bread, no gluten-free flour, no gluten-free cookies, but fresh vegetables, fruit, potatoes, herbs, meat and milk from grassfed cows. No candy, no chocolate, no chips, no ready desserts and so on. This 'zero gluten' diet is also applied to patients who don't recover well (see Fasano's book 'Gluten Freedom' and Hollons' article about Trace gluten contamination 2013). So to make things clear, it is better to distinguish a 'gluten-free'diet (which is low in gluten in my opinion) from a true 'zero gluten diet'. In Europe, this is very challenging, because many food additives are derived from wheat (and not maize like in the US), not only glucose syrup, dextrose and maltodextrin, but also more than 20 E-numbers (coloring agents, sweeteners, antioxydants, acidulants, flavour enhancers and so on) which are abundantly used in many food products because of their convenient functional properties and their attractive (low) price. During the last ten years, the production of wheat has doubled, according to agricultural researchers (Gilissen, Reducing the incidence of allergies and intolerances to cereals, 2014). This might have attributed to the rising incidence of celiac disease and other gluten-related disorders, and it can have a negative effect on the health of many celiac disease patients, who inadvertently consume more gluten than they realize.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites


    Guest
    This is now closed for further comments

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate
  • About Me

    Dr. Rodney Ford M.D.

    Dr. Rodney Ford is a Pediatric Gastroenterologist. He was Professor of Pediatrics at the Christchurch School of Medicine. He runs the Children's Gastroenterology and Allergy Clinic in New Zealand. He has written a series of 7 books on gluten (www.DrRodneyFord.com). His main theory is that symptoms from gluten reactions arise from brain and nerve damage. His latest book is "The Gluten Syndrome" which encapsulates current ideas and concepts of gluten and the harm that it does.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Related Articles

    Destiny Stone
    Celiac.com 03/12/2010 - According to the National Institutes of Health, approximately 3 million Americans suffer from celiac disease. Characterized by small intestinal inflammation, intestinal injury and intolerance to gluten, celiac is  a genetic T-cell mediated auto-immune disease. Those diagnosed with celiac disease know that the only cure is an entirely gluten-free diet for life.  When left untreated, celiac can manifest into life-threatening illnesses such as, heart disease, osteoporosis, and cancer. However, modern science is now presenting us with an alternative to suffering needlessly, and it comes in the shape of a little non-assuming pill called Larazotide Acetate.
    While celiac disease affects 1 in 133 people, those numbers do not take into account the thousands of other people w...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 05/30/2011 - Income plays a major role in whether patients with uncommon symptoms of celiac disease are accurately diagnosed, according to a new study from the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.
    A team of researchers led by Daniel Leffler, MD, compared data of nearly 800 adult patients with celiac disease based on presenting symptoms and household and per capita earnings.
    Some patients had complained of acute gastrointestinal distress, while others complained of classic celiac disease signs like weight loss and anemia, and others of less typical issues.
    Regardless of patient symptoms upon complaint, the research team found "a very striking linear correlation" between levels of diagnosis and in higher versus lower income groups.
    Basically, people with...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 09/14/2011 - There is a bit of a dust-up over the cost of gluten-free bread to UK taxpayers. It seems that either UK's National Health Service (NHS) is being gouged, or that the conservative party had released inaccurate statistics about the cost of gluten-free bread to UK taxpayers.
    In the UK, those diagnosed with celiac disease are given a doctor's prescription that allows them to purchase gluten-free bread from stores or pharmacies at cost that is partly subsidized by the taxpayer.
    The dust-up began when press reports stated that each loaf of gluten-free bread cost the NHS in Wales £32 (over $40), once the costs of diagnosis and prescription were factored in.
    This prompted a reply by major gluten-free bread-maker Genius Foods noting that Genius supplies the bread ...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 03/09/2012 - Subway stores in Oregon are in the process of rolling out gluten-free sandwich buns and gluten-free brownies as regular menu items statewide, according to Subway spokesperson Cathie Ericson.
    For millions of Americans who avoid gluten, due to celiac disease or gluten sensitivity, eating out can be a constant challenge. Having easy access to a safe, tasty, low-cost gluten-free sandwich is like the Holy Grail for some of those folks. For many, being able to grab a gluten-free Subway sandwich would be a major step toward vanquishing the challenges of eating gluten-free.
    Subway understands that being gluten-free "…really cuts down on fast-casual dining options, particularly sandwiches,” said Michele Shelley, Subway board member and owner.
    Many people wer...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 06/18/2012 - Following US approval (SA GRAS) of its natural potato protein isolates, Dutch ingredients firm Solanic is touting their protein as a way for manufacturers to craft higher quality gluten-free baked goods. The protein is approved at levels of .01 to 10% in manufactured baked goods.
    The product is designed to create softer breads that will stay fresh longer, and which look and feel much more like regular wheat-based breads. According to Solanic manager for gluten-free, Paul Hart, the protein could bring the shelf-life for gluten-free bread products up to one-week.
    The company also claims that their protein also boasts a favorable amino acid profile that may help boost the nutritional value of products in which it is included.
    Solanic's protein isolates have ...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 10/04/2013 - As part of a nationwide change on the part of colleges and universities to address food allergies and sensitivities, more and more campuses are offering gluten-free foods to their students. Here is a list of some of the most notable so far, in alphabetical order:
    BARD COLLEGE
    Bard College is currently renovating one of their main dining halls to include a new gluten-free section.
    BAYLOR UNIVERSITY
    At Baylor University, students can find a wide range of gluten-free menu options through the school’s dining services. Information on gluten-free meals, dining halls and menu items will meet their needs through the menus posted online each week.
    CARLETON COLLEGE
    At Carleton College, each dining hallo offers a dedicated gluten free s...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 06/13/2014 - As the number of students eating gluten-free continues to rise, colleges and universities are scrambling to keep up with an increasing demand for gluten-free options.
    The latest news comes from the University of Wisconsin, where the Net Nutrition program enables students with food allergies to more easily navigate the cafeteria.
    The program allows people to screen for allergens and food intolerance, and offers an easy way to subtract menu items a person cannot have, she said. UW’s dining halls have incorporated gluten-free items such as pizza, pasta, deserts and various baked goods, while Union South has also incorporated gluten-free options at its restaurants.
    The result has been a dramatic increase in the number of gluten-free UW student food options.<...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 06/19/2014 - Congratulations, you’ve begun to eat gluten-free! However, just because a product is gluten-free doesn't mean that it is automatically healthier than gluten-containing counterpart.
    So, before you go patting yourself on the back for embracing gluten-free food, keep in minds that many gluten-free products are no healthier than their gluten-containing counterparts. Like many regular commercial products, many gluten-free foods are hiding one or more of these dirty secrets in plain sight on their labels.
    Many gluten-free products, especially baked goods, are made with high amounts of sugar, salt, refined ingredients, fillers, fats, and even gluten contamination. Here are a few common offenders:
    Sugar—Many gluten-free products are high in sugar. In...


    Scott Adams
    Celiac.com 02/02/2015 - On December 9th, 2014, Anna Marie Phillips filed a lawsuit in Santa Clara County Superior Court against P.F. Chang's China Bistro, Inc., headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona, for discrimination and violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The suit claims that P.F. Chang's forces people with celiac disease to pay higher prices for gluten-free versions of their menu items. According to the complaint, P.F. Chang's charges one extra dollar per gluten-free item, however, they do not add these surcharges on to their regular menu items.
    The lawsuit is seeking class action status, and claims that over the past four years more than 3,000 people in 39 states have been affected at P.F. Chang's 204 restaurants. The plaintiff claims that the gluten-free diet is medically...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac.com 09/19/2017 - Hookworms. Intestinal parasites. They sound gross. The thought of having one's gut infected with a parasitic worm generally makes people's skin crawl. Indeed, intestinal worms, like hookworm, have a bad reputation among health experts, and have been the subject of fierce public health campaigns seeking their eradication. However, researchers have also documented the gut healing abilities of parasites like hookworm.
    In fact, part of how hookworms seem to work in nature is to promote an optimal gut environment in which they can thrive. In nature, the guts of people infected with hookworm are generally healthy. Could hookworms and other intestinal parasites prove key to treating and possibly eliminating diseases like celiac, and asthma?
    A number of clinicians...


  • Recent Activity

    1. - TessaBaker replied to MiriamW's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      54

      Hair loss

    2. - Celiac16 replied to Sultana's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      3

      Thiamine supplementation

    3. - Fluka66 replied to Fluka66's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      Waiting for urgent referral.

    4. - trents replied to Fluka66's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      2

      Waiting for urgent referral.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      120,988
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Jenny B.
    Newest Member
    Jenny B.
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Popular Now

    • Blanco
      12
  • Popular Articles

    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
  • Upcoming Events

×
×
  • Create New...