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Quick Southern Fried Catfish (Gluten-Free) - Celiac.com


Scott Adams

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Quick Southern Fried Catfish (Gluten-Free)

Celiac.com

Adding too many fillets at a time will drop the oil temperature, causing the breading to absorb oil, and leaving your fillets soggy. Get FREE Celiac.com email alerts (1-3 email per month with the latest celiac disease research and information, ...

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    1. - trents replied to Hummer01's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
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      Diagnosis confusion

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    4. - Scott Adams replied to CJF's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
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    5. - knitty kitty replied to Alibu's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
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      Waiting on biopsy after positive bloodwork, but also not really believing this is real


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    • trents
      That is one issue but the bigger issue may be the human tendency to rationalize it all away without an official diagnosis such that you keep falling off the gluten free bandwagon. But there is the option of going for the gluten challenge in a more robust way and getting retested.
    • Scott Adams
      Welcome to the forum!  Do you mean that you eat food from fryers that also cook gluten items, and you don't have serious issues? If so, the problem with this approach is that, depending on how often you do this, you could be causing villi damage if you have celiac disease (you haven't mentioned whether or not you have celiac disease), which can lead to more serious issues later.
    • Hummer01
      Oh yes, I figured 50g of bread would contain way less than that in gluten. I just meant to say that I tried to make my 2 daily slices count instead of 2 tiny Wonder bread slices haha.  Thanks for the insight trents, I appreciate someone validating that what I'm going through isn't all in my head or something! This process has been so frustrating and confusing.  I guess the only thing about not getting the "official" diagnosis is not knowing how strict to be with CC (in my early 20s trying to think about the long term effects) but I hope starting the diet will bring some relief either way. Thanks again. 
    • Scott Adams
      Thanks for sharing that. For what it's worth, a majority of celiacs can eat such products without villi damage--which has been documented in many studies that you can read here: https://www.celiac.com/celiac-disease/miscellaneous-information-on-celiac-disease/gluten-free-diet-celiac-disease-amp-codex-alimentarius-wheat-starch/ But super sensitive celiacs should definitely avoid it.
    • knitty kitty
      @Alibu, It's the thiamine (in the forms TTFD or Benfotiamine) that can get into the brain easily and improve migraines.  The magnesium Threonate won't help by itself.  Taking  the thiamine regularly will keep them away. Sounds to me like your doctor is looking for the Marsh 3C or 4 Stage (total villus damage) to make his diagnosis.  Those studies I sent show that damage at Marsh 3C or 4 will develop over a longer period of time. Newer diagnosis criteria would diagnose you with Celiac with your HLA DQ 2.5 genes and high antibody levels alone.  You would benefit by following a gluten free diet. I have type two diabetes.  I used to wake up with migraines if I ate high carbohydrate foods before bed.  My blood glucose level stayed too high throughout the night.  I'd wake dehydrated, foggy, and headachy/migraine developing the next morning.  I was low in Thiamine.  Thiamine is needed to make insulin.  Diabetics have a greater metabolic demand for thiamine because they lose more thiamine in their urine.  98% of diabetics are thiamine deficient.  Diabetes is another autoimmune disease that can accompany celiac disease.  Have you had an A1C test?    Eating a diet heavy in carbohydrates uses up available thiamine quickly.  If you don't have sufficient thiamine, the body stores carbohydrates as fat.  The SIBO bacteria flourish with a high carbohydrate diet.  MCAS develops as the body fights the SIBO.   Thiamine improves MCAS.  Mast cells make histamine and release it as part of the inflammation response.  Mast cells can become  hypersensitive and release histamine at the least provocation in Thiamine insufficiency.  Mast cells need Thiamine to help hold their wad.   MCAS often occurs with and is exasperated by SIBO.  I found the Autoimmune Protocol Diet (Dr. Sarah Ballantyne) helps with both.  This Paleo diet starves out the SIBO bacteria and calms the MCAS.  If you change your diet, you change your intestinal flora.  Following the AIP paleo diet and thiamine made a noticeable difference in my health fairly quickly.   Thiamine works with the other B vitamins to make enzymes that keep the body functioning well.  A B Complex, Vitamin C, and extra thiamine like Benfotiamine will help immensely.   I hope this helps.  I had to decide that my Celiac genes were switched on and causing health problems even though I did not have the high antibody levels and visible damage in my intestines needed to make a textbook diagnosis.  You know your body best.  I knew Celiac was my problem.  I made the necessary changes and feel much better for it.  
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