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Poll: Who Will Eat


jknnej

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jknnej Collaborator

I am just curious: please say yes or no as to whether you will eat McDonald's fries again and state what country you are in.


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  • Replies 69
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VydorScope Proficient

McDonalds fries contian wheat, wheat is posion to me and my son, so theres no way I would eat them, nor my son. Here in Nashville, TN we do not belive in intentionaly eating posion. :D

jknnej Collaborator

Just a quick yes or no will do. This thread is just intended as a quick poll, not a debate.

DavidB Apprentice
I am just curious: please say yes or no as to whether you will eat McDonald's fries again and state what country you are in.

no way!

teebs in WV Apprentice

NO

USA

Mango04 Enthusiast

No - USA

Guest nini

NOPE - USA


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i canary Rookie

No - USA

jerseyangel Proficient

No / NJ /USA

Judyin Philly Enthusiast

Nope, not for me

USA

judy :ph34r:

Rachel--24 Collaborator

I think I may try them some day and see how I feel. Thats a loooong ways off for me though. I havent even had the fries in over a year.

-CA-USA

why are we saying where we're from? :unsure:

plantime Contributor

No. Kansas, USA

Perhaps you should have set this up using the poll feature. People have things to say on most every topic, especially me!

jknnej Collaborator

Sorry-didn't realize there was a poll feature. Asked where people are from because it seems as though there might be a difference in ingredients in Canada.

Carriefaith Enthusiast

No.

I live in Canada.

elonwy Enthusiast

I will never grace the inside of another Mc'Ds.

NO.

Southern California

Rachel--24 Collaborator
Asked where people are from because it seems as though there might be a difference in ingredients in Canada.

Ahh...I see that now. I missed it in your question. Just thought everyone wanted to say where they were from. :rolleyes:

gf4life Enthusiast

No.

USA

nogluten- Newbie

No. USA.

pixiegirl Enthusiast

No

Cape Cod, USA

10yrsdigst Newbie
Just a quick yes or no will do. This thread is just intended as a quick poll, not a debate.

not in the US but in Sweden I will still eat EVERYthing minus nuggets since they can't make those gluten free. Mc Donalds in Sweden has gluten free bread so I will eat there. There should really be a class action started against them

IronedOut Apprentice
not in the US but in Sweden I will still eat EVERYthing minus nuggets since they can't make those gluten free. Mc Donalds in Sweden has gluten free bread so I will eat there. There should really be a class action started against them

Wow - I might consider MOVING! :lol:

otherwise

No - USA

happygirl Collaborator

No

VA, USA

mouse Enthusiast

NO, won't eat anything there again.

USA

lovegrov Collaborator

Withholding judgment until we see if they test whether there really is any gluten.

richard

mommida Enthusiast

NO. USA.

I might consider visiting a gluten free option McD in Europe, though.

Laura

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    • rei.b
      Okay well the info about TTG-A actually makes a lot of sense and I wish the PA had explained that to me. But yes, I would assume I would have intestinal damage from eating a lot of gluten for 32 years while having all these symptoms. As far as avoiding gluten foods - I was definitely not doing that. Bread, pasta, quesadillas (with flour tortillas) and crackers are my 4 favorite foods and I ate at least one of those things multiple times a day e.g. breakfast with eggs and toast, a cheese quesadilla for lunch, and pasta for dinner, and crackers and cheese as a before bed snack. I'm not even kidding.  I'm not really big on sugar, so I don't really do sweets. I don't have any of those conditions.  I am not sure if I have the genes or not. When the geneticist did my genetic testing for EDS this year, I didn't think to ask for him to request the celiac genes so they didn't test for them, unfortunately.  I guess another expectation I had is  that if gluten was the issue, the gluten-free diet would make me feel better, and I'm 3 months in and that hasn't been the case. I am being very careful and reading every label because I didn't want to screw this up and have to do gluten-free for longer than necessary if I end up not having celiac. I'm literally checking everything, even tea and anything else prepacked like caramel dip. Honestly its making me anxious 😅
    • knitty kitty
      So you're saying that you think you should have severe intestinal damage since you've had the symptoms so long?   DGP IgG antibodies are produced in response to a partial gluten molecule.  This is different than what tissue transglutaminase antibodies are  produced in response to.   TTg IgA antibodies are produced in the intestines in response to gluten.  The tTg IgA antibodies attack our own cells because a structural component in our cell membranes resembles a part of gluten.  There's a correlation between the level of intestinal damage with the level of tTg antibodies produced.  You are not producing a high number of tTg IgA antibodies, so your level of tissue damage in your intestines is not very bad.  Be thankful.   There may be reasons why you are not producing a high quantity of tTg IgA antibodies.  Consuming ten grams or more of gluten a day for two weeks to two months before blood tests are done is required to get sufficient antibody production and damage to the intestines.  Some undiagnosed people tend to subconsciously avoid lots of gluten.  Cookies and cakes do not contain as much gluten as artisan breads and thick chewy pizza crust.  Anemia, diabetes and thiamine deficiency can affect IgA antibody production as well.   Do you carry genes for Celiac?  They frequently go along with EDS.
    • rei.b
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    • knitty kitty
      Food and environmental allergies involve IgE antibodies.  IgE antibodies provoke histamine release from mast cells.   Celiac disease is not always visible to the naked eye during endoscopy.  Much of the damage is microscopic and patchy or out of reach of the scope.  Did they take any biopsies of your small intestine for a pathologist to examine?  Were you given a Marsh score? Why do you say you "don't have intestinal damage to correlate with lifelong undiagnosed celiac disease"?   Just curious.  
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