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

Sick Just From The Smell Of Gluten?


XxKittykat

Recommended Posts

XxKittykat Rookie

I was wondering, can you get sick just from smelling gluten? Lately I've noticed that if my father is in town and he eats whatever gluten-containing meal that makes the house smell, I start to get sick.

Ex. Yesterday he made BLT's, I was sitting in front of the toaster, I get up 10 minutes later and start to feel sick. Not as bad as if I had eaten the gluten, it passed rather quickly (an hour or so, but who has time for that?)...but it still happened. I know it wasn't anything I had eaten earlier, it was morning!

Also, I have noticed that it happens everytime he makes bread or pasta (which is way too often for me). It happens also near bakerys and the such (no restaurants for me!). Has this happened to anyone else, or am I just that weird?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



MySuicidalTurtle Enthusiast

I have read about possible sickness from breathing in gluten but not just by being near it and smelling it.

Kaycee Collaborator

XxKittykat, you are just as weird as me, but you could be just a little bit weirder.

Smelling gluten filled foods does not make me sick, but it makes me feel sick. The smell is horrible and it turns my stomach.

I can remember the first time I walked past the bread in the supermarket and I thought that stinks, and that was just a couple of weeks after being gluten free. The bread nearly two years later still stinks and turns my stomach, so does toast and fast food outlets and barbeques when cooking. I don't think it is all in my head, but could you have a more sensitive stomach than me and it is the smell that makes you phsyically sick? Like you said thankfully it is only for about an hour, but it is still a long time to be incapacitated anywhere.

Cathy

  • 3 months later...
peanut369 Newbie

It's funny because I logged in today to explore just this question! I've noticed that if I stop at Dunkin Dounts to get an iced coffee, no flavors, one sugar, skim milk (meaning no gluten!) I feel sick to my stomach by the time I get back out to the car. (yes, I drink iced coffee year round)

I just had to leave my neighbor's house, because I went from feelig wonderful to being crampy, nauseous, and nasty within the course of about half an hour. My friend was baking regular cupcakes for a birthday party. The only thing I could figure was the thick smell of cupcakes cooking. I'm home now, and the feeling is already subsiding.

Oh, the other day I went to Shaw's and bought some glutino cookies, and thought for sure they must have had gluten despite the labeling, because a few minutes after I scoffed a handful in the car in the parking lot, I got crampy and nauseus. Thinking back, the last thing I did before leaving the store was cruise the fresh bakery, where they were pulling baguettes out of the ovens.

One thing about the smell: we need to know WHAT makes the smell of a baked good. Is it a gas, meaning no way can it make us sick because all the gluten stays in the product, OR IS the smell from actual particles of the bread that 'ride the heat waves' and sperad through the air? Anybody with a chemistry background out there?

Umm... not to gross you out, but there's a reason things taste like they smell, it's usually becuase there are particles of the original in the air... thinking of farts this way is really freaky. Anybody have info to verify or debunk the science?

Of course, this could be psychosomatic, because we smell something yummy we know we can't have. Stress is a funny mistress.

:)

I won't be offended, promise!

lmvrbaby Newbie

A few weeks ago I felt fine. Went over to my mother's to help her with something and as soon as I walked in the door I asked wht the smell was. She was cooking a roast with a ton of seasonings. She opened the oven door I immediately started feeling sick. She thought it was me cause I have never reacted that way. I went home and just being outside breathing in the cool air and then laid down I felt a lot better. I called her to ask what seasonings and she said there were a lot and she couldn't remember.

I have never felt that way before even from my own cooking but then again I cook mostly gluten free. All gluten free for me but cook gluten for the rest of the family. Everything is seperated. So I believe it is possible to have a reaction just from the smell. :(

num1habsfan Rising Star

I think it's very possible that you may breathe something in? because I always get SUPER sick during farming, like actually glutened just from breathing in the air that's full of either grain dust or smoke from the burning stubbles. And it's not like I'm sticking my nose right into the grain or eating it!

I also get sick when I'm near a bakery or someone is baking in a house. I normally have no sense of smell but as soon as I can smell gluten its impossible to ignore...it definitely sets off my allergies.

~ Lisa ~

Gemini Experienced
XxKittykat, you are just as weird as me, but you could be just a little bit weirder.

Smelling gluten filled foods does not make me sick, but it makes me feel sick. The smell is horrible and it turns my stomach.

I can remember the first time I walked past the bread in the supermarket and I thought that stinks, and that was just a couple of weeks after being gluten free. The bread nearly two years later still stinks and turns my stomach, so does toast and fast food outlets and barbeques when cooking. I don't think it is all in my head, but could you have a more sensitive stomach than me and it is the smell that makes you phsyically sick? Like you said thankfully it is only for about an hour, but it is still a long time to be incapacitated anywhere.

Cathy

Same here and what really ticks me off is that many non-Celiac's think I am making it up.

My very understanding husband has yo toast his bread in a room off the kitchen, with a door I can close and a window to open to get rid of the smell. I don't get physically sick but nauseated and, if bad enough, my intestines will ache like a toothache for a couple of hours. I nearly was taken down at the pizza counter at Whole Foods a couple of weeks back when I thought I would be nice and buy him a few slices of pizza.....very bad idea. I was smelling the pizza fumes while waiting for them to wrap the order and was not feeling good the rest of the day.

I actually don't mind the whole thing as it is the main reason I find this diet so easy to stick to and have not craved gluten since I was diagnosed. It just makes it hard when, sometimes, it's hard to avoid the smell and then people think you are weird or something because the smell of cooking wheat makes you nauseous. If I had a dime for every time I get the "look" from someone, I could retire by now!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



num1habsfan Rising Star
Same here and what really ticks me off is that many non-Celiac's think I am making it up.

Yeah they always say "oh it can't be that bad". I'd like to see them try to live on this diet!!! When i smell flour it smells like..rotting bitter food being shoved right under my nose. I think for us people who are very sensative to gluten it may be the worst part about having Celiac!!

~ Lisa ~

larry mac Enthusiast
..... Smelling gluten filled foods does not make me sick, but it makes me feel sick. The smell is horrible and it turns my stomach. I can remember the first time I walked past the bread in the supermarket and I thought that stinks, and that was just a couple of weeks after being gluten free. The bread nearly two years later still stinks and turns my stomach, so does toast and fast food outlets.....

.....When i smell flour it smells like..rotting bitter food being shoved right under my nose.....

Very interesting cases here. Feeling ill from smelling aromas associated with gluten I could easily understand. My guess is it's probably psychosomatic, mind over matter. That doesn't make it any less real for you. You really are feeling ill, it's just your brain triggering it. Our sense of smell is 3000 times more sensitive than our sense of taste. So, it doesn't take too many molecules to smell something, depending on the source and person of course. Flour dust particles do contain gluten, but hardly any smell compared to cooking aromas. But flour dust are big particles, huge compared to molecules. When you smell cooking aromas, I'd guess those to be relatively small vapor molecules. I don't think there could be any long peptide chains (gluten) in those. But I'm not a chemist, so I don't want to presume to know for sure.

But what puzzles me is why these smells are so obnoxious to you. They still smell like heaven to me. The fact that I can't eat those foods didn't change the smells for me. This is the first I've heard of this happening. Anyone else have this problem? Do you remember these foods smelling bad before you were diagnosed? To all of a sudden have your sense of smell drastiscally change upon being diagnosed also seems highly psychosomatic. Then again, don't pregnant women sometimes undergo odd taste/smell changes, albeit temporary? I don't know what causes that either. Hormones?

best regards, lm

p.s., Sorry Lisa, I see you were never diagnosed with Celiac. On the contrary, all your Celiac tests came out negative. But that's probably because you went gluten-free before any tests. So for you, did this phenomena occur after you went gluten-free? Wow, I didn't even know there were 82 related celiac disorders. You got it rough girl!

num1habsfan Rising Star
Very interesting cases here. Feeling ill from smelling aromas associated with gluten I could easily understand. My guess is it's probably psychosomatic, mind over matter. That doesn't make it any less real for you. You really are feeling ill, it's just your brain triggering it. Our sense of smell is 3000 times more sensitive than our sense of taste. So, it doesn't take too many molecules to smell something, depending on the source and person of course. Flour dust particles do contain gluten, but hardly any smell compared to cooking aromas. But flour dust are big particles, huge compared to molecules. When you smell cooking aromas, I'd guess those to be relatively small vapor molecules. I don't think there could be any long peptide chains (gluten) in those. But I'm not a chemist, so I don't want to presume to know for sure.

But what puzzles me is why these smells are so obnoxious to you. They still smell like heaven to me. The fact that I can't eat those foods didn't change the smells for me. This is the first I've heard of this happening. Anyone else have this problem? Do you remember these foods smelling bad before you were diagnosed? To all of a sudden have your sense of smell drastiscally change upon being diagnosed also seems highly psychosomatic. Then again, don't pregnant women sometimes undergo odd taste/smell changes, albeit temporary? I don't know what causes that either. Hormones?

best regards, lm

p.s., Sorry Lisa, I see you were never diagnosed with Celiac. On the contrary, all your Celiac tests came out negative. But that's probably because you went gluten-free before any tests. So for you, did this phenomena occur after you went gluten-free? Wow, I didn't even know there were 82 related celiac disorders. You got it rough girl!

it doesnt just smell that bad, it tastes that bad! The 2 times that I had to eat regular food for a test (once was for 5 days) there were a couple moments that I nearly threw up instantly. Not from being glutened, but because the bun I was eating tasted that horrible!! I did not have any problems with this until after I went gluten-free. And I have heard from someone else in my hometown who has a similar issue. I am from a farming commmunity, and I can tell you the graindust smells exactly as baked goods do. Also in college 2 years ago a lady was doing a demonstration and coated a pan with flour (had i known this I would have left the room before hand) and I had an almost immediate allergic reaction just from it in the air. When i go to the grocery store now I always tell mom "they just baked, cuz it stinks". And sure enough we walk buy and there's fresh stuff out of the oven.

and about my signature: I have a couple of books that list side effects of celiac/gluten intollerance/gluten allergy (which i have all 3 of) and that's how many things I never had a problem with until 5 years ago. i know they are connected to Celiac because they get worse if i'm glutened.

~ Lisa ~

Joyous Enthusiast

If there aren't any particles in the air, it may very well be a conditioned response, just like with Pavlov's dogs. Your brain has associated foods that contain gluten with feeling sick. There's certainly nothing wrong with that... It's a good thing, if you ask me. I'd rather think that something I can't eat smells like poison than think it smells delicious!

BRob66 Rookie

I still love the smell of baked goods but i get itchy from the inside out smelling it. i don't think it's imagined. just depends on how sensitive some people are to it.

tarnalberry Community Regular

Open Original Shared Link

Smells come from aromatics - from volatile compounds that can get to the olfactory senses. Volatile compounds have to be able to evaporate into the air, something that a heavy molecule like a gluten protein can't do. The idea that conditioning could lead to those symptoms isn't so far fetched, and doesn't mean the symptoms aren't real in the least. It also doesn't mean that there isn't any flour, or crumbs in the area where the smells are found - a bakery or bread aisle would be a great place for this - that could contaminate you via a contact ingestion route.

prinsessa Contributor

Just the sight of gluten filled foods can make me feel slightly ill. Everytime I see someone take a bite of a sandwich or cake I think "how can they eat that poison?" and then I remember that everyone isn't gluten intolerant like me. I even feel guilty eating gluten free food like cake and cookies. The mind is a very powerful thing. Just because it is "in your mind" doesn't mean you are making it up.

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. - knitty kitty replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      7

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    2. - knitty kitty replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      49

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

    3. - catnapt replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      7

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    4. - catnapt replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      7

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    5. - xxnonamexx replied to xxnonamexx's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      49

      My journey is it gluten or fiber?

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

    • Total Members
      133,368
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

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

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • knitty kitty
      @catnapt,  Wheat germ contains high amounts of lectins which are really hard to digest and can be irritating to the digestive tract.  They can stimulate IgG antibody production as your blood test shows.   Even beans have lectins.  You've simply eaten too many lectins and irritated your digestive tract.   You may want to allow your digestive tract to rest for a week, then start on gluten in "normal" food, not in concentrated vital wheat gluten. This explains it well: Lectins, agglutinins, and their roles in autoimmune reactivities https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25599185/
    • knitty kitty
      I take Now B-1 (100 mg) Thiamine Hydrochloride, and Amazing Formulas L-Tryptophan (1000 mg).   Both are gluten free and free of other allergens.  I've taken them for a long time and haven't had a problem with them. I take Vitamin A from BioTech called "A-25".  It's gluten and allergen free and made in the USA.  It's a powder form of Vitamin A.  I was having trouble digesting fats at one point, but found I tolerated the powder form much better and have stuck with it since.   Tryptophan and Vitamin A help heal the intestines as well as improves skin health.  I get Dermatitis Herpetiformis and eczema flairs when my stomach is upset.  So I'm healing the outside as well as the inside.   I take one 1000 mg Tryptophan before bedtime.   With the Thiamine HCl, take 100 mg to start.  If you don't notice anything, three hours later take another. You can keep increasing your dose in this manner until you do notice improvement.  Remember not to take it in the evening so it won't keep you too energized to sleep. When I first started Thiamine HCl, taking 500 mg to 1000 mg to start was recommended.  If you've been thiamine insufficient for a while, you do notice a big difference.  It's like the start of a NASCAR race: Zoom, Zoom, turn it up!   This scared or made some people uncomfortable, but it's just your body beginning to function properly, like putting new spark plugs in your engine.  I took 1000 mg all at once without food.  It kicked in beautifully, but I got a tummy ache, so take with food.  I added in Thiamine TTFD and Benfotiamine weeks later and felt like I was Formula One racing.  So cool.  You may feel worse for a couple days as your body adjusts to having sufficient thiamine.  Feels sort of like you haven't cranked your engine for a while and it backfires and sputters, but it will settle down and start purring soon enough.  Adjust your dose to what feels right for you, increasing your dose as long as you feel improvement.  You can reach a plateau, so stay there for several days, then try bumping it up again.  If no more improvements happen, you can stay at the plateau amount and experiment with increasing your Thiamine TTFD.  It's like being your own lab rat.  LoL Yes, take one Benfotiamine at breakfast and one at lunch.  Take the B Complex at breakfast. Take the TTFD at breakfast and lunch as well.  I like to take the vitamins at the beginning of meals and the NeuroMag at the end of meals.   You may want to add in some zinc.  I take Thorne Zinc 30 mg at breakfast at the beginning of the meal.   Are you getting sufficient Omega Threes?  Our brains are made up mostly of fat.  Flaxseed oil supplements, sunflower seed oil supplements (or eat the seeds themselves) can improve that.  Cooking with extra virgin olive oil, avocado oil, or coconut oil is also helpful.   @Wheatwacked likes phosphotidyl choline supplements for his Omega Threes.  He's also had dramatic health improvement by supplementing thiamine.  You're doing great!  Thank you for sharing your journey with us.  This path will smooth out.  Keep going!  
    • catnapt
      good luck! vital wheat gluten made me violently ill. I will touch the stuff ever again.  
    • catnapt
      I wouldn't consider this lucky. I can NOT tolerate the symptoms. And I googled it and I was not even getting 10 grams of gluten per day and I was extremely ill. They'd have to put me in the hospital. I'm not kidding.   I will have my first appt with a GI dr on March 4th   I will not eat gluten again - at least not on purpose   they are going to have to come up with a test that doesn't require it. 
    • xxnonamexx
      What Thiamine Hydrochloride brand do you take? Is it like the other vitamins I have added? What brand Tryptophan and amount do you take. Thanks
×
×
  • 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.