Celiac disease genetic testing has been around for years. I didn’t worry about getting tested, I figured I knew what my results would be. But I finally bit the bullet and did it. The results of that test made me a believer that it is crucial in ruling in or ruling out the possibility of celiac disease.
3 immediate family members have it, now I am the one getting celiac disease tests. Read along over the next week or so to see what happens during the testing.
83% of people with celiac are undiagnosed. New research suggests celiac screening for at-risk patients may be off some doctors’ radar.
New research into why some children get celiac disease and others don’t sheds new light on celiac, children and when doctors should test for it.
The term Celiac Disease Autoimmunity came across my desk this last week. Am I the only one who hadn’t heard of this before? People with it need to eat gluten free so why not just call it celiac disease? So I did a little investigating for clarification.
85% of Americans with celiac are undiagnosed. Why? New research says the lack of diagnosis goes beyond doctors not looking for it. So what may be keeping Americans from getting tested for celiac?
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 top celiac physician & researcher says doctors can no longer ignore the disease.
A new study suggests our screening guidelines to diagnose kids with celiac might make the grade.
Here is the one thing you should know before getting your biopsy for celiac disease.