Jump to content
  • 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 Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Questions About Crumbs


StClair

Recommended Posts

StClair Apprentice

Suppose bread crumbs fall into the silverware drawer. When you pick out your spoon, there are no crumbs attached. Is that spoon contaminated due to only molecules of gluten that could cling to the surface?

Another crumb (and maybe dumb) question. Suppose there are bread crumbs on one end of a stick of butter. The other end is crumb-free. Is that end OK, or not OK?

These questions are hypothetical, as I am newly diagnosed and extremely careful, but I am curious about limits and whether they apply to all celiac sufferers. There is plenty of gluten in my kitchen for the other family members, but I scrupulously avoid it, including in the above scenarios.

Thanks!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



nvsmom Community Regular

As far as I know, the gluten you don't see can still make you ill.  It's better safe than sorry.  Wash the utensils and never used shared butter. Why take the risk, right?

ravenwoodglass Mentor

I agree with Nicole. In addtion do not cook with flour for the gluten eaters. Let them get their gluten breads, cookies, cakes etc premade. Flour particles in the air will also get you. 

StClair Apprentice

Are there degrees of sensitivity, such that some can tolerate these tiny amounts and some can't? I'm just curious, wondering for the future, after I am healed.

kareng Grand Master

You will find very few people on here that will tell you it's Ok to cheat or not be as careful as you can. This is from the Univ of

Chicago Celiac Center site:

" The gluten-free diet is a lifetime requirement. Eating any gluten, no matter how small an amount, can damage your intestine. This is true for anyone with the disease, including people who do not have noticeable symptoms. It can take weeks for antibody levels (indicating intestinal damage) to normalize after a person with celiac disease has consumed gluten. Depending on a person’s age at diagnosis, some problems, such as delayed growth and tooth discoloration, may not improve."

Open Original Shared Link

Edit to add: accidental gluten will happen, whether you feel it or not. Eliminate as many chances of accidental glutenings as possible - your own toaster, butter, safe foods, safe places to eat, etc. Why add to the unavoidable accidental gluten?

cap6 Enthusiast

When new to this I really wondered about the "levels of sensitivity" myself since we hear about some things that make some people sick and not others. Here's the deal on that -  Any bit of gluten will cause damage.  As you heal a crumb of gluten may not make you physically sick (or as sick as you once used to get) as your gut is healing but it does cause damage to your gut.  Even if you cheated, ate a bite and didn't get physically sick, the internal damage is still being done.  Bottom line.....no cheating, constant vigilance, any little bit will continue to harm you and damage your insides.  No worth the risk.   

RMJ Mentor

Are there degrees of sensitivity? As a scientist I must respectfully disagree and say yes, although this does NOT mean that any celiac should ever knowingly eat something that may have been contaminated with gluten! When the FDA set the acceptable level for labeling gluten free food they evaluated and summarized the scientific literature. Studies have been done with acute (one time) and chronic exposure of celiacs to measured amounts of gluten, evaluated by biopsy. There is quite a range of results both within and between studies. One study found effects at 0.4 mg gluten per day. Another found that a one time dose of several hundred milligrams did not cause damage. The variability could have to do with how the studies were designed, how subjects were chosen, how well the biopsy sites were chosen, and differences between subjects (degrees of sensitivity).

So yes, there are degrees of sensitivity. However, unless you go absolutely, completely gluten free, then do a challenge with a tiny known amount of gluten and have a biopsy to determine your sensitivity level, it would be safest to not take any risks.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



StClair Apprentice

I was thinking mostly in terms of accidental ingestion of gluten after the system has healed. Believe me, I do not foresee ever knowingly eating it again. Today I realized the horse feed I'm exposed to twice a day has something in it called "wheat middlings." I'm afraid of either breathing the dust or getting it on my clothes and transferring it to food. It feels like it's radioactive! I assume that things get a little less intense with time and practice.

Peggy-O Newbie

Suppose bread crumbs fall into the silverware drawer. When you pick out your spoon, there are no crumbs attached. Is that spoon contaminated due to only molecules of gluten that could cling to the surface?

Another crumb (and maybe dumb) question. Suppose there are bread crumbs on one end of a stick of butter. The other end is crumb-free. Is that end OK, or not OK?

These questions are hypothetical, as I am newly diagnosed and extremely careful, but I am curious about limits and whether they apply to all celiac sufferers. There is plenty of gluten in my kitchen for the other family members, but I scrupulously avoid it, including in the above scenarios.

Thanks!

I have the same issue with sharing a kitchen with my husband. I need to keep separate items such as peanutbutter and dips, anything a person can contaminate by double dipping. We just put our initials on the jars. I am one of those super sensitive people so I take no chances and keep utensils where they should not come in contact with crumbs.

nvsmom Community Regular

I was thinking mostly in terms of accidental ingestion of gluten after the system has healed. Believe me, I do not foresee ever knowingly eating it again. Today I realized the horse feed I'm exposed to twice a day has something in it called "wheat middlings." I'm afraid of either breathing the dust or getting it on my clothes and transferring it to food. It feels like it's radioactive! I assume that things get a little less intense with time and practice.

 

I would be careful with that...  We can get sick from airborne flour, so I'm guessing that would be a risk too.  :(  Maybe start a thread specifically about that and others with large animal  experience will chime in.

nvsmom Community Regular

Are there degrees of sensitivity? As a scientist I must respectfully disagree and say yes, although this does NOT mean that any celiac should ever knowingly eat something that may have been contaminated with gluten! When the FDA set the acceptable level for labeling gluten free food they evaluated and summarized the scientific literature. Studies have been done with acute (one time) and chronic exposure of celiacs to measured amounts of gluten, evaluated by biopsy. There is quite a range of results both within and between studies. One study found effects at 0.4 mg gluten per day. Another found that a one time dose of several hundred milligrams did not cause damage. The variability could have to do with how the studies were designed, how subjects were chosen, how well the biopsy sites were chosen, and differences between subjects (degrees of sensitivity).

So yes, there are degrees of sensitivity. However, unless you go absolutely, completely gluten free, then do a challenge with a tiny known amount of gluten and have a biopsy to determine your sensitivity level, it would be safest to not take any risks.

 

I wouldn't trust that because intestinal damage is just a symptom (albeit a key one) of celiac disease.  Did they measure bloating, arthralgia pain, migraine severity, fatigue, vitamin deficiencies, or anxiety?  My guess is they just checked intestinal damage.  Yeah, intestinal damage is bad but my arhralgias made life harder for me. Intestinally, I had few symptoms, so it makes me wonder if I had been a subject in their study if I would have shown damage, or would I just have hobbled over to their offices on arthritic joints.

 

Plus I think our reactions vary depending on the day, week, month, and our health.  Sometimes a food may knock us back and other times we won't even notice the same food.

 

I think celiacs should assume they are extremely sensitive - most of us are.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

Nicole just said what I was going to say. Celiac is so much more than just a gut disease. I wish researchers would take that into account but we seem to have a way to go with that. 

 

As to the horse feed. Please do start a thread to see what other horse owners do to protect themselves. Breathing in the dust will be a problem gluten wise. If no one else can feed and care for the horses do wear a mask and perhaps a coverall that can be taken off when you exit the stable. 

CathyO Rookie

I'm the only celiac in my house. However, I only cook gluten-free. My husband and grandson eat gluten-free with me. I allow a few gluten-free snacks for the child, but they're kept in a bin on the lowest shelf off the pantry. He's old enough to be able to be responsible for clean up. They're mostly chips or cookies. Some microwave things, like pizza rolls.

None of my cutting boards or pots or utensils are used to prepare items with gluten. Cross contamination is easy to happen.

I can't imagine a little kid eating gluten filled goodies running around my house touching things, or me!

I'm pretty sensitive and react to minute traces.

Wheatless32 Newbie

You need to get a REALLY thick, well fitting dust mask and gloves/spare clothing, or stop feeding horses, one or the other, otherwise you will suffer over time. There have been multiple studies of celiac farmers suffering from feed. You either can't handle /be near the feed, or you need to take so many precautions it will almost make sense to have someone else do it.

There is really only 1 solution to not getting sick - eliminate any exposure. Even small exposure over time can add up to permanent damage to the intestine.

StClair Apprentice

This is a huge problem for me to figure out :(. At this time, I don't know what I'm going to do, but I'm grateful to get the facts here. I will research different types of feed and be sure about wearing the mask for now. Thanks.

ravenwoodglass Mentor

This is a huge problem for me to figure out :(. At this time, I don't know what I'm going to do, but I'm grateful to get the facts here. I will research different types of feed and be sure about wearing the mask for now. Thanks.

Do look into other feed. You may be able to find some that is gluten free and that your horse will tolerate. Perhaps make a call to the horse's vet. He might have some feed suggestions. Also be careful when grooming. 

If no one else in your household can handle the feeding perhaps a neighbor, 4 H kid, or another horse owner might be willing and able to help out. Someone that loves horses might even do it in exchange for being able to ride one when they are done. If your horses will tolerate other riders. 

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - cristiana replied to Ginger38's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      15

      Shingles - Could It Be Related to Gluten/ Celiac

    2. - Tazfromoz replied to Ginger38's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      15

      Shingles - Could It Be Related to Gluten/ Celiac

    3. - hjayne19 posted a topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      0

      Celiac Screening

    4. - yellowstone posted a topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      0

      Cold/flu or gluten poisoning?

    5. - Churro replied to Churro's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      17

      Celiac disease symptoms

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,076
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Monica L
    Newest Member
    Monica L
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • cristiana
      Thank you for your thoughtful contribution, @Tazfromoz. I live in the UK and the National Health Service funds free vaccines for people deemed to be at heightened risk.  I was pleasantly surprised to discover that as a coeliac in my 50s I was eligible for this vaccine, and didn't think twice when it was offered to me.  Soon after diagnosis I suffered mystery symptoms of burning nerve pain, following two separate dermatomes, and one GP said he felt that I had contracted shingles without the rash aka zoster sine herpete.  Of course, without the rash, it's a difficult diagnosis to prove, but looking back I think he was completely spot on.  It was miserable and lasted about a year, which I gather is quite typical. For UK coeliacs reading this, it is worth having a conversation with your GP if you haven't been vaccinated against shingles yet, if you are immunosuppressed or over 50. I have just googled this quickly - it is a helpful summary which I unashamedly took from AI, short for time as I am this morning!   My apologies. In the UK, coeliac patients aren't automatically eligible for the shingles jab unless they're severely immunosuppressed or over the general age for vaccination (currently 50+) but Coeliac UK recommends discussing the vaccine with a GP due to potential splenic dysfunction, which can increase risk, even if not routine for all coeliacs. Eligibility hinges on specific criteria like weakened immunity (chemo, certain meds) or age, with the non-live Shingrix vaccine offered in two doses to those deemed high-risk, often starting from age 18 for the immunocompromised.
    • Tazfromoz
      My understanding, and ex I erience is that we coeliacs are likely to suffer more extreme reactions from viruses. Eg we are more likely to be hospitalised with influenza. So, sadly, your shingles may be worse because you are coeliac. So sorry you had to go through this. My mother endured shingles multiple times. She was undiagnosed with coeliac disease until she was 65. Me at 45. I've had the new long lasting vaccine. It knocked me around badly, but worth it to avoid shingles.
    • hjayne19
      Hi all,  Looking for some advice. I started having some symptoms this past summer like night sweats and waking at 4 am and felt quite achy in my joints. I was training heavily for cycling for a few weeks prior to the onset of these symptoms starting. I have had low Ferratin for about 4 years (started at 6) and usually sits around 24 give or take. I was doing some research and questioned either or not I might have celiac disease (since I didn’t have any gastric symptoms really). My family doctor ran blood screening for celiac. And my results came back: Tissue Transglutaminase Ab IgA HI 66.6 U/mL Immunoglobulin IgA 1.73 g/ My doctor then diagnosed me with celiac and I have now been gluten free for 3 months. In this time I no longer get night sweats my joint pain is gone and I’m still having trouble sleeping but could very much be from anxiety. I was since referred to an endoscopy clinic to get a colonoscopy and they said I should be getting a biopsy done to confirm celiac. In this case I have to return to eating gluten for 4-6 weeks before the procedure. Just wanted some advice on this. I seem to be getting different answers from my family physician and from the GI doctor for a diagnosis.    Thanks,  
    • yellowstone
      Cold/flu or gluten poisoning? Hello. I've had another similar episode. I find it very difficult to differentiate between the symptoms of a cold or flu and those caused by gluten poisoning. In fact, I don't know if my current worsening is due to having eaten something that disagreed with me or if the cold I have has caused my body, which is hypersensitive, to produce symptoms similar to those of gluten poisoning.        
    • Churro
      I'm no longer dealing with constipation. I got my liver test last month and it was in normal range. Two years ago I did have a vitamin D deficiency but I'm know taking vitamin D3 pills. Last month I got my vitamin D checked and it was in normal range. I don't believe I've had my choline checked. However, I do drink almond milk eat Greek yogurt on a daily basis. 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.