Celiac disease is one of the most common autoimmune diseases in the world. Sometimes it causes a host of awful symptoms, and other times there are very few symptoms until a significant health problem develops. If people with celiac disease ingest gluten, it causes significant inflammatory harm to the body. To the small intestine, and any part of the body. The longer a celiac goes undiagnosed, the greater the risk to their health. The unfortunate fact is that most people with celiac disease don’t know they have it. If you’re aware of the symptoms, you can get diagnosed before your health is at serious risk.

In celiac disease, the immune system attacks the small intestine when individuals eat gluten (a protein found in grains like wheat, barley and rye). Celiac disease affects at least one percent of those in the United States, or around 3.3 million people.

What are the symptoms of celiac disease?

--Diarrhea

This is the most typical symptom of celiac disease, and also one of the most distressing. It's estimated around half of adults with celiac disease experience diarrhea. It tends to be more common in children than adults. Following a gluten free diet can provide relief from diarrhea.

--Low energy or exhaustion

This can be a symptom of dozens of different health problems. Fatigue results from nutrient deficiencies due to malabsorption. Iron deficiency is incredibly common in celiacs and is often the symptom that leads to diagnosis of the condition. Taking an iron supplement usually doesn’t correct the deficiency, because the gut is so inflamed. Fatigue also results from the chronic inflammation, where the immune cells release a host of inflammatory chemicals every time a celiac eats gluten. Fatigue can take a long time to resolve.

--Bloating and abdominal cramps

Because digestion is so significantly impaired, it’s possible to feel sick after eating anything. Along with bloating and cramps, some people experience intestinal gas and nausea. Removing gluten from the diet offers significant relief.

--Weight loss, or loss of muscle mass or bone density

In people with celiac disease, ingesting gluten damages the villi, which are hair like projections on the lining of the small intestine. Nutrients from food are absorbed by the villi. If the villi are damaged, a person can’t absorb nutrients properly and ends up malnourished, no matter how much they eat. One sign of malnutrition can be weight loss. This is more common in children than adults. It is also possible to be overweight and have celiac disease. Certainly not everyone loses weight. Females in their 40s with osteoporosis should all be checked for celiac disease.

--Low mood or anxiety

Most people don’t consider symptoms like anxiety or depression when they think of celiac disease, but they are actually very common. So too are brain fog and sleeping problems. Nutrient deficiencies and inflammation adversely affect the brain and nerves, raising the risk of these problems.

If you experience any of these symptoms, please see your doctor for a proper diagnosis.

How to repair the damage from gluten

Remove every last trace of gluten from your diet

A celiac must remove every trace of gluten if they hope to heal the inflammation in their gut. Some people also need to remove dairy products, legumes and sugar. Other potentially problematic foods include all grains, eggs and nightshade vegetables (tomatoes, potatoes, capsicum and eggplant). These foods contain various proteins that may inflame the gut lining in some people. Lectins, saponins and enzyme inhibitors can impair digestion and increase intestinal permeability. This is explained thoroughly in the book Healing Autoimmune Disease. In addition, any food to which you have an allergy or intolerance can inflame your gut when you consume it.

Increase levels of good gut bugs

People with gut problems and people with autoimmune disease always have unbalanced gut bugs. Dysbiosis means having too much bad bacteria, Candida or other microbes in the bowel and not enough good microbes. These harmful bugs inflame the gut lining and inhibit nutrient absorption. It is important to correct this imbalance with an herbal anti-parasitic formula, and with the diet changes mentioned above. Another common problem is Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO). This means there are too many microbes growing in the small intestine, where they shouldn’t be. They aren’t necessarily bad bugs, they’re just living in the wrong place. SIBO commonly causes nutrient deficiencies and it is strongly linked with restless legs syndrome. Sometimes a low FODMAP diet is necessary in order to overcome SIBO.

Support digestive function

Deficiencies of stomach acid, bile and digestive enzymes are almost always present in people with an inflamed gut. It is critically important that you digest your food as thoroughly as possible. This will enable you to absorb the maximum amount of nutrients from your food, but there’s also another reason. If you don’t digest your food properly, it will literally rot or ferment inside your gut. The residues of undigested carbohydrate in particular, will act as food for harmful gut microbes, or encourage their growth in the small intestine, creating SIBO and a leaky gut. These wastes that aren't being digested properly will also leave you feeling dreadful. Common symptoms include bloating, gas, foggy head, low mood, anxiety or low motivation. Supplementing with hydrochloric acid, digestive enzymes and ox bile can be immensely helpful.

Fix the leaky gut

There are specific foods and nutrients that help to reduce inflammation in the digestive tract and restore the health of the intestinal lining. We need to make it a stronger barrier, so that you don’t keep absorbing toxins and wastes into your bloodstream. The most important substances to heal a leaky gut are glutamine, berberine, zinc and vitamin A. For more information about leaky gut and gluten see the book Gluten: Is it making you sick or overweight?

 

The above statements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat or cure any disease.