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Can Someone Explain Leaky Gut To Me?


Avarismama

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Avarismama Apprentice

I am gluten-free now for 2 weeks. I still feel like poo. I know That I am still getting traces og G though because I live with my inlaws and they don't get it! Especially my father in law! I think I make have otherintolerances too though. Anyway, what is leaky gut syndrom? How do you know that you have it? What causes it? Thanks!


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Avarismama Apprentice

anyone?

lizard00 Enthusiast

Check out this website:

Open Original Shared Link

That is the best way that I have seen it explained and the symptoms that it involves.

Hope that helps!

aprilh Apprentice

Basically the intestinal lining becomes comprimised either by gluten/celiac, candida, improper imbalance of bacteria, ect and food proteins leak through into the bloodstream. Then the body sends out antibodies to fight off the invaders. This causes many food reactions that you might not normally have if you did not have leaky gut.

L-glutamine is good at healing this condition. There are others but I cannot remember them offhand. Once you heal leaky gut, be sure to replenish the good bacteria with a good quality human strain probiotic such as Natren.

Open Original Shared Link

www.natren.com

www.customprobiotics.com

happygirl Collaborator

Buy your own food, make your own food.

celiac and leaky gut Open Original Shared Link

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    • Matthias
    • Scott Adams
      This is a really common area of confusion. Most natural cheeses (cheddar, Swiss, mozzarella, Parmesan, brie, camembert, and most blue cheeses) are inherently gluten-free, and you’re right that the molds used today are typically grown on gluten-free media. The bigger risks tend to come from processed cheeses: shredded cheese (anti-caking agents), cheese spreads, beer-washed rinds, smoke-flavored cheeses, and anything with added seasonings or “natural flavors,” where cross-contact can happen. As for yeast, you’re also correct — yeast itself is gluten-free. The issue is the source: brewer’s yeast and yeast extracts can be derived from barley unless labeled gluten-free, while baker’s yeast is generally safe. When in doubt, sticking with whole, unprocessed cheeses and products specifically labeled gluten-free is the safest approach, especially if you’re highly sensitive.
    • Scott Adams
    • Matthias
      Thanks a lot for your response! Can you maybe specify which kind of cheeses I should be cautious about? Camembert/Brie and blue cheeses (the molds of which are nowadays mostly grown on gluten-free media, though, so I've read, right?) or other ones as well? Also, I was under the impression that yeast is generally gluten-free if not declared otherwise. Is that false?
    • Scott Adams
      I agree with @trents, but thank you for bringing this up here!
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