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Celiac Disease & Gluten-Free Diet Blogs


miloandotis

miloandotis

Attributes Test

Open Original Shared Link Contrary to popular belief, Lorem Ipsum is not simply random text. It has roots in a piece of classical Latin literature from 45 BC, making it over 2000 years old. Richard McClintock, a Latin professor at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, looked up one of the more obscure Latin words, consectetur, from a Lorem Ipsum passage, and going through the cites of the word in classical literature, discovered the undoubtable source. Lorem Ipsum comes from sections 1.10.32 and

whenever

whenever

Going Out to Eat on a Gluten-Free Diet

Good Morning all, Sorry I have not written in a few days. We have be busy like all of you. Friday night my husband and I went to our favorite place to eat (since the diagnosis). Pizzeria Uno. The most fascinating thing happen. We were sitting there eating our food talking about what else, G-free eating, when all of the sudden the couple sitting in the booth behind ours said "you all are eating gluten free?" As it turned out her husband was diagnosed with many food allergies including

Nancy Kotlowski

Nancy Kotlowski

Finally Back Off Of Gluten...and Starting The Master Cleanse

I had a heck of a time getting prepared for my bloodwork. I had daily issues that kept me running back to the washroom all day and half the night. Fortunately, I

miloandotis

miloandotis

Looking For Local Celiac Sufferers

Calling all celiac sufferers in the Portland area, more specifically Cedar Mill who would like to get together and commiserate, swap recipes, share tips or whatever.

mary m

mary m

Onion Rings, Pizza, Betty Crocker, And Cuban

I found a house to buy, so since I'm moving out, might as well mess up the kitchen here....So I tried the beer batter onion ring recipe on this site, but the first "test" rings came out without the batter on very well, so I had a brainstorm and after dipping the raw rings in batter, I coated them in gluten-free Orgran bread crumbs. They turned out crunchy, greasy, and sweet. So savory! They looked and tasted so good, I think non-gfreople would eat them! Traveldude was feeling under the

brendygirl

brendygirl

Awaiting New Bloodwork

I went to see my GP yesterday. He has ordered the anti tissue transglutaminase. He said I need to restart eating gluten, though I have been off it for a week. He didn't have a clue for how long. I called the lab and they did not know either.   So last night, in the name of gluten loading, I had three beers...and agadashi tofu with my usual sushi. This morning I had bran buds and a sandwich at lunch. Now I think I may just die! My stomach is cramping worse then a charliehorse in an olympi

miloandotis

miloandotis

Going to See a Dietitian After My Celiac Disease Diagnosis

As soon as the diagnosis of celiac disease came, the doctor told us he would refer us to a really good dietitian. We were very excited to get in front of her because we had so many questions. As with anything else, the more information you get the more you need so you can filter through it all. I found out that the insurance would not cover it. The plan only covered a dietitian for a diagnosis of diabetes. I could have waited until letters were sent and pre-authorization was in place

Nancy Kotlowski

Nancy Kotlowski

Schar Chocolate Hazelnut Bar (Gluten-Free)

These delicious creations are by far the best pieces of chocolaty goodness I've had. Once you take that first bite you'll keep going back for more and more. Take my word try them out and tell me what you think. (Open Original Shared Link).

Brandy Rodriquez

Brandy Rodriquez

Green Goodness

Has anyone out there that is gluten-intolerant tried the Bolthouse Farms Green Goodness drink? I LOVE their other beverages but have never tried this one because it says it is made with all sorts of evils..wheat grass, barley, etc. Yet, it is labeled gluten-free. I emailed them and asked how this is possible, and they responded that their suppliers harvest the grains before the gluten develops in them. Is this possible? I could swear I learned in horticulture and botany classes that it is not. I

SunnyJ

SunnyJ


miloandotis

miloandotis

Day Four

I'm itchy. Everywhere. Going nuts. I have a big party tonight at my boss's home, with a lot of special foods. I have not decided if I will eat or not. I still have not figured out a drink option. Did I mention I'm itchy?

miloandotis

miloandotis

Day Three Down... Lots More To Go...

So I was diagnosed with Celiac... on Thursday. Interesting. I had a feeling but put it off... I had the common mentality that if I wasn't diagnosed then gluten couldn't hurt me. But I always feel like crap. My grandmother had Celiac and was not diagnosed until it was much too late. I've seen what this can do-- and it's scary. I guess that can be good (not in a mean way) but at least since I watched someone go through it who didn't have a choice-- someone who ate bread to calm her stomach when it

Jazzdncr222

Jazzdncr222


miloandotis

miloandotis


miloandotis

miloandotis

Did Elisabeth Hasselbeck Commit Plagiarism in The G-Free Diet?

I got a phone call last night from my friend Youssef (he also produces my celiac disease Podcasts) who informed me that Elisabeth Hasselbeck, author of The G-Free Diet: A Gluten-Free Survival Guide (2009), was being sued for plagiarism and copyright violation by Susan Hassett, author of Living With Celiac Disease (2008). He was concerned that there might be some merit to the case, and if so, perhaps I shouldn’t have Elisabeth Hasselbeck on the front page of Celiac.com. After a quick internet sea

Scott Adams

Scott Adams in USA Recalls

Living with a Gluten-Free Husband

First thing this morning I read a post on the Open Original Shared Link regarding a husband who has celiac disease, while his wife does not. It was like reading about myself. Sometimes we may feel that the person in our lives who has celiac disease is not interested in taking a hand in the treatment. Like the wife in the post, I too find it to be very frustrating at times. But then I stopped and asked myself a tough question. Why am I doing this? "This" being doing all the research, food sh

Nancy Kotlowski

Nancy Kotlowski

Gluten-free Lipstick!

Are you celiac or gluten sensitive or gluten intolerant? If so, have I got a Gluten-free lipstick to share with you: Open Original Shared Link Some of us are more sensitive than others about what goes on our skin and in or near our mouths. For anyone celiac, I am sure you will want to look in to this company. Anyhow, I just had to share this with you, and please be sure and share your “finds” with me too. Over the next few months, I have some terrific vitamin companies to share with you, which

Tina Turbin

Tina Turbin

Canobie Lake Park

Has anyone out there been to Canobie Lake Park while on the gluten-free diet? I called the park today and was initially told they have a strict policy of not allowing any outside food into the park, so we could not bring our own food. They also said they couldn't tell me over the phone if any of the food offered there was gluten-free and not contaminated. They suggested coming to the gate and paging the manager to inquire if there was any food there for us to eat, or bringing our lunch and ea

cmc

cmc

Celiacs Who Can't Stop Cheating on the Gluten-Free Diet

I was doing some research tonight when I stumbled upon what I consider a most disturbing celiac-related confession on a website that appears to highlight anonymous revelations. The title was I’m Dying and I’m 19… The skeptical news person in me questions how realistic the preceding “confession” is, but whether it’s real or not, I believe the idea of non-adherence to the gluten-free diet is a real issue and deserves some space on this blog. So allow me to use

Amy Leger

Amy Leger

21 Months into the Gluten-free Diet

Life is interesting, that is for sure. Things have gotten really wonderful. The brain fog is gone, and I see life in a different light. The last two years have been hard, but I realized how fortunate I've been. God has given me many gifts and opportunities. I have never been so grateful for the wonderful things, and also the difficult times that I've endured. I really see the path that I must take and all of the people that I will be blessed to know. I would like to help all I can with th

Janis Quinlan

Janis Quinlan

Celiac Disease on NPR June 15, 2009

Did anyone catch the early morning news on NPR yesterday? I turned it on in the middle of a very good piece on a family with celiac disease. The focus was on the recent diagnosis of a 15-year old boy. He was active in sports and had intermittent symptoms, until one day, they became constant and fairly severe. He was diagnosed fairly quickly, and responded well to a gluten free diet. In fact, that was the best part of the story. He explained that he felt nearly entirely well after only two w

Wendy Cohan, RN

Wendy Cohan, RN

Sex Drive/Testosterone can be Depleted by Certain Foods

Most people are familiar with terms like natural hormone balance, BHRT, and bio-identical hormones. Alternative health care practitioners run expensive tests to alter or favorably increase specific hormones and offer specially-compounded expensive medications that are more compatible than regular Rx's. There is an easier, simpler and far less costly way: Reduce those foods that deplete your hormones and that inhibit your sex drive. The following articles will a

Mike Menkes, LMT

Mike Menkes, LMT

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  • Blog Comments

    • dixonpete

      I asked a logical follow-up question to ChatGTP5:

      Can you estimate what percentage of celiac hookworm hosts like myself achieve full remission from the disease?

      ChatGPT said:

      Great question, Pete. Let’s be very clear here:

      There isn’t a single hard number published for “what percentage of celiacs with hookworms achieve full remission,” but we can triangulate from clinical trials and community data:

      Clinical Trial Evidence

      In controlled studies, 0% achieved true full remission when challenged with sustained moderate gluten (≥2 g/day or short bursts of 16 g/day).

      Even with 20–40 N. americanus, villous atrophy still occurred under those challenges.

      However, around 30–50% of participants did experience softer symptoms and improved quality of life at micro-exposures (≤200 mg/day).

      Conclusion from trials: Hookworms help reduce symptoms and inflammatory markers at small exposures, but do not produce full clinical remission under regular gluten intake.

      Community / Self-Reported Outcomes

      Among self-treating celiacs, reports of “functional remission” exist — meaning hosts can eat gluten without noticeable symptoms.

      Based on helminthic therapy support groups and survey-type accounts, this looks like a minority (maybe 10–20%) of long-term hosts.

      However, these cases are controversial because:

      Some people may be asymptomatic but still sustaining silent mucosal damage.

      Community reporting tends to over-represent strong responders.

      Putting It Together

      Clinical remission (no symptoms + no villous damage on gluten diet): Essentially 0% proven in trials with 20–40 worms.

      Symptomatic remission (no symptoms, but mucosal injury uncertain): Maybe 10–20% of self-reported hosts claim this.

      Partial benefit (improved tolerance, less severe symptoms, better quality of life, but still need a gluten-free diet): This is the most common outcome — probably 30–50% of hosts.

      👉 So if we phrase it plainly:
      The average celiac hosting 20 hookworms won’t reach full remission. A small minority (≈10–20%) say they can eat gluten freely without symptoms, but this is not supported by trial evidence and carries risk of silent damage. For most, worms act as a safety net for cross-contamination rather than a cure.

      Would you like me to give you a visual chart (clinical trial vs. self-reports: full remission, partial, none) so you can see the proportions side by side?

    • dixonpete

      8 hours ago, miguel54b said:

      Thanks, I am desperate to find a cure too.

      I should add that hookworms aren't a cure for celiac disease. Some people, and I couldn't tell you how many, stop evincing the symptoms of celiac disease while their hookworm colonies are healthy. Others have a reduction in the severity of their reactions to gluten, but should still stay well away from it. And other people don't seem to be helped much at all.

      My theory all this is because of the different root genetics of the individual's celiac disease. My cousin is also celiac, and I'm highly confident he would be put in remission with hookworms like I was, but he has no desire to try them, so I'll never know if I was right.

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