by
Jordan Reasoner
Conventional medicine usually works like this…
I have a
problem, the doctor figures out what the problem is, and gives me a
conventional prescription generally supported by Doctors, researchers,
and the FDA.
This prescription is supposed to be relatively safe
and effective in accordance with the laws in the United States and most
modern countries.
But what if the conventional prescription doesn’t work?
Like people with Celiac Disease that follow a strict gluten-free diet and don’t get better…
Does that Mean the Gluten-Free Diet is the Wrong Prescription for Celiac Disease?
Earlier in this series,
I showed you that gluten is the toxic invader that causes Celiac
Disease. Logically, removing the intruder is the first step towards
treatment. That’s why anyone diagnosed with this autoimmune condition
gets the conventional Celiac Disease prescription: follow a strict
gluten-free diet for life.
But the latest Celiac Disease research is painting a very different picture.
The
University of Chicago has one of the leading treatment and research
centers for Celiac Disease in the U.S., so my jaw dropped when they
posted this:
“While healing may
take up to 2 years for many older adults, new research shows that the
small intestines of up to 60% of adults never completely heal,
especially when adherence to the diet is less than optimal.”[1].
60% odds are worse than flipping a coin…
It
would be easy to read that and think, “So it’s the people that don’t
follow a strict gluten-free diet that don’t heal.” But to be honest, I
don’t think they said it as strongly as they should have. Here’s a
recent study that paints a much darker picture of the Gluten-Free Diet’s
success rate.
Only 8% of Adult Patients Healed on a Gluten-Free Diet…
A 2009 study in
The Journal of Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics
looked at 465 Celiac Disease patients and found only 8% of adult
patients reached “histological normalization” after following a
gluten-free diet for 16 months, meaning their gut tissue completely
recovered to that of a healthy person. The authors stated:
“Complete normalization of duodenal lesions is exceptionally rare in adult coeliac patients despite adherence to GFD” [2]
These people followed a strict gluten-free diet for 16 months and most didn’t heal their gut.
The success rate of the conventional Celiac Disease prescription isn’t working… and the research is exploding the truth.
Another 2010 study in the
American Journal of Gastroenterology
looked at 381 adults with biopsy-proven Celiac Disease. The authors
found small intestine mucosal recovery occurred in only 34% of
participants following a gluten-free diet for 2 years. They concluded:
“Mucosal recovery was absent in a substantial portion of adults with CD after treatment with a GFD.”[3]
The
Conventional Merck Manual definition for diagnosing Celiac Disease provides that:
“The
diagnosis is confirmed by an initial microscopic examination of a
biopsy specimen revealing flattened villi of the small intestine and by a
subsequent improvement in the lining after the person stops eating
foods containing gluten.”
These studies clearly show that
when a Celiac stops eating foods containing gluten, the intestinal
lining isn’t healing. But that’s only scratching the surface of what’s
going on…
65% of Gluten-Free Celiacs Still Have a Raging Fire in Their Gut
The same 2009 study in
The Journal of Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics
of 465 Celiac Disease patients 16 months gluten-free found that 65%
still had “persistent intraepithelial lymphocytosis,” a.k.a.
inflammation in the gut.
[4]
Their intestines are on fire with inflammation even after 16 months gluten-free. Why is that important? We
know gut inflammation is associated with a laundry list of health
issues, including cancer and early death. That’s bad news for the
conventional Celiac prescription and even worse news for the people not
getting better on a gluten-free diet. Want more evidence gluten-free
doesn’t put the fire out?
A 2008 study in the Journal of Inflammation looked at 18 symptom-free Celiac Disease (SFCD) patients and found they still had elevated markers of gut inflammation even after 2 years on a gluten-free diet. The authors reported:
“Faeces of both active CD and SFCD (symptom-free 1-2 years on a GFD) patients, representing an imbalanced microbiota, significantly increased TNF-alpha production and CD86 expression in PBMCs, while decreased IL-10 cytokine production and CD4 expression compared with control samples.” [5]
In another 2009 study from the
American Journal of Gastroenterology, researchers looked at small intestine biopsies from 45 children with Celiac Disease and 18 clinical controls. The authors
found an increased presence of T cells (inflammatory marker) in well-treated CD patients:
“The
long-lasting presence of high frequencies of T cells in the epithelial
compartment in well-treated CD indicates that the epithelium is stressed
possibly because of constant attack.”[6]
Both
of these studies looked at patients that are supposed to be “healed”…
supposedly “well-treated.” Even though they appeared to be symptom-free,
the medical tests paint a much different picture.
These asymptomatic adults and kids still had inflammatory fires raging in their gut… promoting further disease development (like Cancer). So
far this research has only reviewed patients following a gluten-free
diet for 1-2 years… but what about long-term? Does the body just need
more time to heal and get back to normal?
56% Have Poor Vitamin Status After 10 Years Gluten-Free
A 2002 study in the of
Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics
looked at the vitamin status of 30 adults with Celiac Disease showing
“biopsy-proven remission,” after following a gluten-free diet for 8-12
years. They found that
56% had poor vitamin status, suggesting that proper nutrient uptake is not occurring. The authors concluded that:
“It
is generally assumed that coeliac patients adhering to a strict
gluten-free diet for years will consume a diet that is nutritionally
adequate. This is supported by the demonstration of a normal bone
mineral density up to 10 years of dietary treatment. Our results may
indicate otherwise. We found signs indicative of a poor vitamin status
in 56% of treated adult coeliac patients.” [7]
Even
after following the conventional Celiac prescription for 10 years, 56%
still showed signs of poor nutrient uptake – meaning their digestive
system still isn’t working like it’s designed to.
That
means after 10 years of being gluten-free, HALF of all Celiacs are
likely starving for the critical nutrients required for health and
longevity. It’s no wonder we have a 77X increased risk for lymphoma.[8]
The Gluten-Free Diet Doesn’t Fix Leaky Gut
Earlier in this series, we discovered that gliadin initiates leaky gut by increasing the zonulin protein in people with Celiac Disease.
And later, we learned that fixing leaky gut is absolutely essential to reversing the damage from Celiac Disease…
But the gluten-free diet doesn’t fix leaky gut…
As
it turns out, when Celiac Disease patients follow a strict gluten-free
diet, their zonulin levels do fall (which is good). But
research shows that they still have elevated levels of zonulin compared to non-Celiacs. And when the zonulin levels are still high… the Tight Junctions can’t restore normal function and the leaky gut remains.
Chris Masterjohn found the same thing reviewing a study by researcher Allessio Fasano,
[9]
Remarkably, they found that celiacs
produce 30 times as much zonulin as non-celiacs, even though the
non-celiacs were not eating gluten-free diets while the celiacs had been
off gluten for over two years!
Here’s a graph of their data:
This
is remarkable because even though the point of the study was to show
that gluten increases zonulin production, the controls were eating
gluten yet had infinitesimal levels of zonulin production, while the
celiacs had not eaten gluten for at least two years yet still had very
high levels of zonulin production. This suggests that something besides gluten may be causing zonulin production in celiacs.
Chris
also pointed out the same study looked at Leaky Gut in Celiac Disease
patients following a gluten-free diet for more than two years:
[NOTE: in the graph below, the smaller the bar, the leakier the gut is]
Here
they measured trans-epithelial electrical resistance (TEER) of
intestinal tissue taken from gluten-free celiacs and gluten-eating
controls. TEER is an estimation of the leakiness of the gut, where a
lower value indicates a greater level of leakiness or permeability. They
found that tissues taken from controls who had been eating gluten had
three-fold less leakiness compared to celiacs who had been off gluten for over two years. This, again, suggests that something besides gluten may be contributing to leaky gut in people with celiac.
So, in summary Chris pointed out:
- Celiacs produce 30 times as much zonulin as non-celiacs, even though the celiacs had been off gluten for over two years!
- Intestinal tissues taken from controls who had been eating gluten had three-fold less leakiness
compared to Celiacs who had been off gluten for over two years (so
Celiacs had a much leakier gut, even while eating gluten-free).
But the evidence doesn’t stop there…
A 2008 study in
the Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research
tested for leaky gut in 22 Celiac disease patients who were on a
gluten-free diet for 1 year. They found these patients following a
gluten-free diet still had a much leakier gut compared to healthy
controls eating gluten (0.013 vs 0.003, P = 0.001). The authors
concluded:
“This means that, at
some time, complete recovery of intestinal villous may not have occurred
and an inflammatory process may have persisted.”[10]
This is crazy! All this research shows the gluten-free diet doesn’t heal Celiac disease.
In fact, the evidence suggests that in many cases, leaky gut and
inflammation remain high for years on a gluten-free diet. This spells
bad news for anyone with Celiac disease relying on a gluten-free diet as
the only treatment protocol…
It breaks down like this…
high inflammation, poor vitamin status, and leaky gut persist on a
gluten-free diet which leads to one thing: untreated Celiac disease…
And Untreated Celiac Disease Will Kill You… Fast
If
you don’t completely heal from Celiac Disease, you’re going to die much
sooner than healthy people. In fact, one of the largest cohort studies
on Celiac disease patients and mortality published in the
Journal of The American Medical Association found that:
- Those
with Celiac disease (villous atrophy) had a 2.80-fold increased risk of
death the first year after diagnosis and a 39% increased risk of death
over the study period
But the authors didn’t stop there…
they also looked at people with intestinal inflammation. Remember the
two studies on “well-treated” (asymptomatic) patients that still had
inflammation? The authors found:
- Those with intestinal
inflammation (and not villous atrophy) had a 4.66-fold increased risk of
death the first year after diagnosis and a 72% increased risk of death
over the study period[11]
A 72% increased risk of death!
In
other words, if you’re a symptom-free Celiac and your labs show signs
of gut inflammation… you’re going to die much sooner than you think.
So, Should Celiacs Eat a Gluten-Free Diet?
Yes…
gluten is still the kryptonite in Celiac Disease, don’t ever eat it.
Following a gluten-free diet is a requirement for treating this
autoimmune condition… but you can’t stop there.
This evidence
clearly shows that only following a gluten-free diet doesn’t fix leaky
gut, gut inflammation, or a damaged gut lining. That means the
gluten-free diet isn’t enough to treat Celiac Disease patients and
anyone using it as the only protocol is at risk for dying much sooner
than they should…
The conventional Celiac prescription is incomplete and not working. There needs to be more.
When Does Your Body Not Absorb Vitamin B-12
Vitamins are organic compounds vital to life. You can meet your daily recommended intake of each vitamin by eating a healthy well-balanced diet that includes a variety of different foods. Your body absorbs vitamins through the lining of the small intestine. Conditions that affect the digestive tract or the breakdown of food can cause your body to not absorb vitamins.
Presence of Pernicious Anemia
The body absorbs vitamin B-12, a water-soluble vitamin, through the lining of the small intestine, but this vitamin must first bind to a protein produced by cells in the stomach lining known as intrinsic factor. Enzymes in the gastric acid free vitamin B-12 from the food particles, which allows it to bind to intrinsic factor. The combination of intrinsic factor with B-12 binds to and gets absorbed by receptors lining the small intestine. Pernicious anemia usually occurs due to an autoimmune response in which the cells of the immune system attack and destroy the cells in the lining of the stomach. This results in a decrease in stomach acid and enzymes, allowing vitamin B-12 to remain attached to the food. In addition, antibodies of the immune system bind to intrinsic factor, interfering with the ability of intrinsic factor to bind with vitamin-12, which inhibits the absorption of vitamin B-12.
Gluten Intolerance
Gluten is the protein found in wheat, rye and barley. Approximately 1 in every 133 people in the U.S. develops an intolerance to gluten, a medical condition known as celiac disease, according to the National Digestive Diseases Information Clearinghouse. For those people, when they consume foods containing gluten, their immune system reacts by attacking the villi, small finger-like projections, in the small intestines. The villi allow the absorption of vitamins and other nutrients through the lining of the small intestine. Over time, the destruction of the villi inhibits the absorption of vitamins.
Intestinal Inflammation
Conditions that cause inflammation of the intestines make your body unable to absorb vitamins. Crohn’s disease, one type of inflammatory bowel disease, or IBS, causes inflammation anywhere in the digestive tract, but most commonly affects the lower portion of the small intestine. The cause of inflammation in Crohn’s disease continues to be an area of study, but one theory suggests the cells of the immune system misinterprets both food and bacteria as foreign invaders, causing the inflammation. Vitamin deficiency due to inhibited absorption is a common complication of Crohn’s disease.
Interruption in Fat Digestion
Some vitamins are fat-soluble, including vitamins A, D, E and K, meaning they bind to or dissolve in fat. Conditions that affect the absorption of fat inhibit the absorption of vitamins. The liver produces bile, a substance consisting of cholesterol, salts and water, vital to the breakdown and absorption of fat. Liver disease reduces bile production, inhibits fat absorption and prevents the absorption of the fat-soluble vitamins. The pancreas secretes digestive enzymes that join with the bile in the intestines. These enzymes aid in the breakdown of foods such as fat. Pancreatitis, a condition characterized by inflammation of the pancreas, reduces the amount of pancreatic enzymes, which inhibits the breakdown and absorption of fat, leaving the body unable to absorb fat-soluble vitamins.
Source:
http://scdlifestyle.com/2012/03/the-gluten-free-lie-why-most-celiacs-are-slowly-dying/
http://livewell.jillianmichaels.com/body-not-absorb-vitamins-5353.html