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Cancer question


Bookgirl32

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Bookgirl32 Explorer

Of course with my severe anxiety and ocd I’m going to focus on the cancer issue. Everything says that following the diet allows you to heal and your risk goes down, which is reassuring. Is getting accidentally exposed the same as not following the diet? I’m not asking for permission to not worry about cross contamination, more asking for the ability to build confidence in this new lifestyle. Does that make any sense?


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lisas11lisa Apprentice

Ask a ton of questions when you eat out.(you can still get accidentally glutened)..read all labels..research everything..If you haven't already..get under the care of a GI..get your scopes..take a Probiotic daily and Digestive Enzymes..Goodluck.

cyclinglady Grand Master

Cancer is rare.  It usually occurs in older patients who were not aware they had celiac disease for years.  If I recall, after a year in the gluten-free diet, your risk for cancer is the same as everyone else in the general population.  My PCP has two celiac patients who refuse to adhere to the diet.  Those two people have a high risk for cancer.  

A few accidental glutenings might be uncomfortable, but it is not going to give you cancer.  

Ennis-TX Grand Master

Bigger concern from the occasional accidental glutenings for me....has been that I found with each one, my symptoms change, and I get new food intolerance issues....the intolerance issues sometimes resolve a month or so later but the further limited diet is a pain.
Cancer concerns ramp down considerably once your antibodies start dropping, they do not spike back up to high risk each time your get glutened just a touch then back down. You have a higher chance of secondary conditions developing then cancer.

Bookgirl32 Explorer

Thank you for the replies! I know it’s a pain I’m asking all these questions. I think I have to tell myself it’s a learning curve and I won’t be perfect at it day one, which mentally is what I want. I feel like if I’m not, somehow I didn’t try hard enough. 

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      The one kind of food I had been buying and eating without any worry for hidden gluten were unprocessed veggies. Well, yesterday I discovered yet another pitfall: cultivated mushrooms. I tried some new ones, Shimeji to be precise (used in many asian soup and rice dishes). Later, at home, I was taking a closer look at the product: the mushrooms were growing from a visible layer of shredded cereals that had not been removed. After a quick web research I learned that these mushrooms are commonly cultivated on a cereal-based medium like wheat bran. I hope that info his helpful to someone.
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