Posts Tagged ‘gluten intolerance’

Fertility and Celiac Disease

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Many people have Celiac Disease or celiac intolerance, and few know that it can affect their attempts at conception. It is an autoimmune response that manifest when gluten, a protein found in wheat, rye, and barley, is ingested. It often takes many years for a correct diagnosis to be made, and, until then, individuals can suffer from chronic diarrhea, constipation, acid reflux, and other digestive disorders, as well as a whole host of seemingly unrelated symptoms. It can also affect fertility. In men with Celiac Disease, it can lead to low sperm count, and women may experience troubles conceiving.

Studies from various countries indicate that fertility problems are indeed more common in women with untreated Celiac Disease, compared to women who do not have it.

The risk of suffering other gynecological and obstetrical problems like miscarriage or preterm birth is also higher for those with Celiac Disease.
Joseph Mercola, “Why Haven’t Infertile Couples Been Told These Facts?”, 2/23/2010

Follow the link to read more about what Dr. Mercola has to say about Celiac Disease and its affects on fertility.

Chef to Plate Celiac Awareness Project

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

May is Celiac Awareness Month!

The Gluten Intolerance Group of North America, one of the foremost leaders in America supporting folks with gluten intolerance and Celiac and raising public awareness of these topics, unrolls their 2nd Annual Campaign. The Chef to Plate Campaign helps spread awareness of Celiac Disease and gluten intolerance to restaurants through dining. They estimate this simple campaign reached 1.6 million people last year! Ways you can participate:

  1. Send the GIG restaurants with gluten-free menus you frequent and trust. They will send them an invitation to participate. Click HERE to sign up your restaurant. Or send complete information to rebecca.powell@gluten.net to recommend your favorite restaurants with gluten-free menus.
  2. Help distribute the campaign materials to restaurants in your area. GIG will send you all the information and the participating restaurants. All you have to do it hand-deliver the materials to the restaurant before May 1st. Click HERE to sign up.
  3. Spread the word about this campaign to the public.

Restaurants loved participating last year. Please help the GIG spread awareness about gluten intolerance.

L is for Listening to Your Body

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

What does it mean to “listen to your body”? With “alternative” and “complementary” medicine becoming more commonly accepted every day, this phrase is also pushing up against cliche. But what does it actually mean? In this next episode of the ABC’s of Gluten Free, Megan and Tiffany talk about balancing external knowledge with our internal messages and explore what it means to understand the signals the body gives in relation to the food we eat. Click here to listen to the L is for Listening to Your Body podcast.

Gluten and Inflammation

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

Inflammation in the body has been identified as the culprit of many health problems. It is now widely recognized that arthritis, edema, joint or muscle pain, stiffness, skin issues, heart or gum disease, obesity, and autoimmune diseases, to name a few, are provoked by chronic inflammation, and may lead to other more grave health issues including death.

A certain degree of inflammation, however, is a helpful, self-protective function. It begins as a very natural process to heal tissue damage, and signals our attention about a particular problem occurring.

My massage patients often feel this inflammation as a sensation of pain. For example, a “knot” in the shoulder is really a site compounded of multiple layers of muscle and connective tissue that have become dehydrated and adhered together. Localized inflammation begins, and presto, we feel sore. In this case the body is warning us that blood flow to the area is restricted, and left unrestrained, greater problems down the road could ensue. White blood cells are recruited to come in and help heal the territory, and the longer that sticky, gooey bound-up area stays stuck, the more of a catching net it becomes for metabolic waste and other toxins passing by, calling in additional white blood cells and creating more inflammation and more sensation. Through deep, targeted massage in that area, the tissue can be ironed out, releasing the debris from the adhesion and allowing proper blood and lymph flow to return. Oddly enough, a secondary effect of the massage is to heighten inflammation and instigate those self-healing methods. Have you ever had somebody firmly rub your shoulder and then noticed that several hours later, it felt warm and tender? Again warning signals are being set off and the body’s innate healing mechanisms are summoned to participate in the repair.

A fever is another great example of the inflammatory function. When your body becomes overloaded by a bacteria or virus, it elevates its temperature to speed up immunological activities and burn off the invaders. Your fever drops when your body achieves satisfactory equilibrium.

The role of inflammation is important in preventing small concerns from snowballing into larger, life-threatening ones. So the problem is not the inflammation itself, but the extent and duration and quality of inflammation, and the associated tissue damage. Tissue reparation and tissue damage happen concurrently. While the function of the inflammation is to address the problem, in a prolonged inflamed state, tissues start decomposing and the type of cells present begin changing, thus it has been said chronic inflammation creates an environment hospitable to cancer.    

The amount of tissue damage is equitable to the level and duration of inflammation. In the case of a food allergy, the inflammation is systemic and long term, providing the individual continues to ingest the harmful substance.

What we eat stokes or quells inflammation in our internal environments. Some foods, such as turmeric, coldwater fish, and leafy green vegetables, support tissue healing and keep inflammation in check. Others, such as hydrogenated oils and sugar, make matters worse.

Researchers have determined that grains are among the highest dietary inflammation provocateurs. Wheat, barley, and rye are three at the top.

As The Food Philospher says in her article “Recognizing Gluten Sensitivity: Inflammation”:

The gluten protein molecules found in wheat are simply not digested well by humans. People who are gluten-sensitive develop an immunological reaction to these molecules that then start to inflame and destroy tissues in the body. Normal tissues become damaged, preventing growth and regeneration… Researchers now know that gluten can cause inflammation in any organ and any cell of your body

Much research substantiates wheat as a highly inflammatory food. Even in non-Celiacs, wheat interferes with the absorption of vitamins and minerals, which is a bummer especially if you go out of your way to pick whole wheat over the refined white stuff. Wheat also increases the activity of certain immune cells, and for Celiacs, some of these immune cells begin to react to one’s own healthy tissues, perceiving them to be invaders, and an auto-immune disease born. Inflammation has been linked to menstrual and fertility issues, autoimmune diseases, nervous and endocrine system disturbances, mood disorders, chronic pain… And so has gluten.

There are indeed other contributors to inflammation in the body, such as smoking, environmental toxins, certain medications, and even stress. So if you think you may be at risk, or you’re experiencing any of the symptoms listed in this article, it might be worth checking with your physician to determine the levels of inflammation in your body and test for gluten intolerance.

I often wonder about the reverse—how a high level of inflammation in the body might increase intolerance to particular foods, but that’s another article entirely. For now we know that gluten enhances inflammation, and inflammation is breeding ground for many serious health complications.

If you’d like to find out how reducing or eliminating gluten from your diet may impact your health, I can guide you through my Gluten-Free Health Counseling Program.

Please contact me for more info!

Copyright Megan Groves, 2009

Vitamins, Part 1

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Clients ask me on a daily basis what I think about vitamin supplementation.

This is a massive topic. There are plenty who can provide education on the science of vitamins–where the ingredients are sourced, how they’re made, and how they work on a molecular level. There are also many philosophical points to supplementation. I’ll deflect to this article http://chetday.com/bvitamins.html, which spotlights b-vitamins, for a brief pros-and-cons.

So I’ll start with a few general statements, and then move on to the important stuff.

After all, I’m more interested in how we can make simple changes to live healthy lives than hashing out this decades-old debate!

So, 1) vitamins are inferior to how nature offers them up in the form of food, 2) vitamin supplements are toxic, and 3) vitamins have helped people in weakened states build back up again and recover from sickness.

1)      What you get from a food the way nature offers it up will always be superior to a vitamin. It’s fresh, your body recognizes and knows how to make sense of it, and it arrives in the perfect proportion. Many vitamins and minerals work synergistically with one other or need other nutrients present in the right amount to be utilized. Vitamins taken in pill form are often too little a quantity to be effective, so great a quantity so as to be toxic, or too much in isolation from their nutrient friends to be absorbed. As mentioned, it’s a huge topic!

2)      Vitamins are generally pretty toxic. Supplement companies, in the business of “nutrition,” can get away with building their vitamins from interesting materials under the guise that they’re toting something good for us. Vitamins are typically made from inferior ingredients, and even their encasings can be poisonous. Many gel caps are made from soy and cottonseed oils, which are always refined, and must undergo chemical processes to make them solid, into synthetic polymers. Synthetic polymers include materials like nylon, silicon, and plastics and make up commonly found items like pipes and tubing and food packaging. Not the most nutritious source of vitamins! Most vitamins also contain funky additives and fillers, such as magnesium stearate, which as one of my teachers, Paul Pitchford, says, destroys many of the body’s key metabolic functions. Finally, many vitamins contain gluten, dairy, soy, and other allergens, making further trouble for folks with food sensitivities.

3)      Vitamins, in very specific instances, may be helpful. This last point may sound contradictory, but I don’t believe anything in life is all good or bad, including our personal aspirations towards health and how we plan to get there. In countless instances, high-dose nutritional therapies, even in these inferior, potentially-toxic forms, have helped millions of people reclaim their lives. I used to be a huge fan of vitamins, and felt like they helped me recover from years of nutritional deficiency due to gluten intolerance. But I don’t need them anymore.

So what’s the alternative to vitamins, and how can we give ourselves the extra nutritional boost? Stay tuned for Vitamins, Part 2, where I speak to this. Thanks!

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