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Description

Celiac disease is grossly underdiagnosed in the United States in large part because the medical community is operating on outdated information about the condition. And despite the recommendations of the National Institute of Health back in 2004, we have yet to implement a mass screening for celiac disease, and health care providers remain alarmingly uninformed.

The Gluten Free RN is taking steps to remedy the situation by sharing the basics for medical professionals. Today she covers the WHO's definition of celiac disease, how our understanding of the condition has change over time, and some common misconceptions about celiac disease. She also explains the top symptoms, recommended testing for celiac disease and gluten sensitivity, and the neurological nature of the disorder.

Listen in to learn what health care providers need to know about this undiagnosed epidemic, the complex web of health issues that may result from undiagnosed celiac disease, and why it is important to have a high index of suspicion and include celiac testing on every differential diagnosis. Help your patients go gluten-free and collect something other than autoimmune disorders! 

What's Discussed: 

The standard of care in the US

The goals of Nadine's consulting business

How the media portrays the gluten-free lifestyle

How our understanding of celiac disease has changed over time

The recommendations of the 2004 NIH consensus meeting regarding celiac disease

The World Health Organization criteria for mass screening

The autoimmune disorders associated with undiagnosed celiac disease

The WHO definition of celiac disease

Why celiac disease can't be ruled out with a single test

Misconceptions about celiac disease in the US medical community

How skin issues are a reflection of what is going on internally

How damage to the small intestine leads to multiple health issues

The classic symptoms of celiac disease

What celiac disease looks like in children

The prevalence of celiac disease in older adults

Potential signs of celiac disease in the aging population

The elements that get into your blood stream as a result of villous atrophy

Top symptoms of celiac disease

The effects of gluten on the brain

Populations affected by celiac disease

The findings of an economic study by Columbia University

The importance of ensuring that medications are gluten-free

Nadine's recommendations around nutrition for celiac patients

Things to consider re: the results of a celiac panel

Additional tests that offer valuable information

Surprising facts around celiac disease contrary to conventional wisdom

 

Resources:

NIH Consensus Statement

"Where Have All the American Celiacs Gone?" in Acta Pediatrica

Montana Gluten Free

"Economic Benefits of Increased Diagnosis of Celiac Disease in a National Managed Care Population in the United States" in the Journal of Insurance Medicine

"Celiac Disease Could be a Frequent Disease in Mexico: Prevalence of Tissue Transglutaminase Antibody in Healthy Blood Donors" in the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology

"Celiac Disease in Middle Eastern and North African Countries: A New Burden? in the World Journal of Gastroenterology

Recommended Labs

CDC 2013 Report Antibiotic Resistance Threats

Cyrex Laboratories

LabCorps

Glutenpro

EnteroLab

Primal Docs

Connect with Nadine: 

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Contact via Email

'Your Skin on Gluten' on YouTube

Melodies of the Danube Gluten-Free Cruise with Nadine

Books by Nadine:

Dough Nation: A Nurse's Memoir of Celiac Disease from Missed Diagnosis to Food and Health Activism