Good news for folks who are gluten free without a celiac diagnosis. New research out of Norway could mean a new screening method that actually will detect celiac disease, even if already on the gluten-free diet.
New research looks at folks who test positive for a celiac marker but report no symptoms. If you have been around celiac disease enough, you know there are folks who say they never have felt symptoms despite being given a celiac or gluten-free diagnosis. Now research wants to know, whether a gluten-free diet helped these folks
83% of people with celiac are undiagnosed. New research suggests celiac screening for at-risk patients may be off some doctors’ radar.
As many as 100,000+ kids have both celiac and type 1 diabetes. Find out what parents should be looking for in symptoms. Plus, why researchers may want celiac screening guidelines changed for diabetic kids.
You get your diagnosis, now you’re gluten free. We answer a reader’s question: Should you get follow-up tests after celiac diagnosis?
A new study suggests our screening guidelines to diagnose kids with celiac might make the grade.
New report looks into how children diagnosed with celiac think their health-related quality of life has changed.
With gluten-free becoming a huge industry, naturally people might want to try the diet. But they usually don’t get tested for celiac. I say this should change.
This new study from Sweden calls the offering of mass testing for celiac a “human right”.
A quick swipe of the mouth is all it takes for this kind of celiac screening! Now research is reporting its not just easy, but it’s also effective.