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.
Are you gluten sensitive or do you have celiac disease? Two new pieces of research look both at how patients are handling the question and what they should do to get an accurate diagnosis.
Don’t have GI symptoms? Must not be celiac. Wrong. Learn more on why you should look beyond gut symptoms for celiac disease.
Early diagnosis is key to keeping health complications related to celiac disease at bay.
The bottom line here is the earlier you get your diagnosis the better off you’ll be both immediately healthwise (you might not feel so crummy) and hopefully preventing further complications like another autoimmune disorder, osteoporosis, infertility or cancer in the future.
In my family alone, if I am just with my parents and my brother — the nuclear family I grew up with — half of them celiac disease! In my own family 1 in 4 has celiac. I am the carrier, but don’t have celiac. I am
Lots of news this week affecting the gluten free and celiac world, here is a quick look at a few of the stories.
A top celiac physician & researcher says doctors can no longer ignore the disease.
Do the “GF” labels or words “gluten-free” on a product tell the truth about their gluten status?
It’s like a Gluten Free Consumer Reports, testing for gluten in products so you know what to expect.
Here is the one thing you should know before getting your biopsy for celiac disease.
When one person has celiac there is likely another family member with it whether they know it or not. The convincing evidence comes from research and lives in reality. Why your family members should get tested now.