Is your problem gluten? Or faddish eating?

ATLANTA (AP) - It sounds like an unfolding epidemic: A decade ago, virtually no one in the U.S. seemed to have a problem eating gluten in bread and other foods. Now, millions do.
Gluten-free products are flying off grocery shelves, and restaurants are boasting of meals with no gluten. Celebrities on TV talk shows chat about the digestive discomfort they blame on the wheat protein they now shun. Some churches even offer gluten-free Communion wafers.
"I don't know whether there's more people getting this or that more people are noticing" they have a problem, said the Rev. Richard Allen, pastor at Mamaroneck United Methodist Church, north of New York City.
Or is it just another food fad?
Faddishness is a big part of it. Americans will spend an estimated $7 billion this year on foods labeled gluten-free, according to the market research firm Mintel. But the best estimates are that more than half the consumers buying these products - perhaps way more than half - don't have any clear-cut reaction to gluten.
They buy gluten-free because they think it will help them lose weight, or because they seem to feel better, or because they mistakenly believe they are sensitive to gluten.
"We have a lot of self-diagnosing going on out there," said Melissa Abbott, who tracks the gluten-free market for the Hartman Group, a Seattle-area market research organization.
Fads aside, research suggests more people are truly getting sick from the gluten found in wheat, rye and barley, but the reasons aren't clear.
In the most serious cases, gluten triggers celiac disease. The condition causes abdominal pain, bloating and intermittent diarrhea. Those with the ailment don't absorb nutrients well and can suffer weight loss, fatigue, rashes and other problems.
It was once considered extremely rare in the U.S. But about 20 years ago, a few scientists began exploring why celiac disease was less common here than in Europe and other countries. They concluded that it wasn't less common here; it was just under-diagnosed.
More recently, a research team led by the Mayo Clinic's Dr. Joseph Murray looked at blood samples taken from Americans in the 1950s and compared them with samples taken from people today, and determined it wasn't just better diagnosis driving up the numbers. Celiac disease actually was increasing. Indeed, the research confirms estimates that about 1 percent of U.S. adults have it today, making it four times more common now than it was 50 years ago, Murray and his colleagues reported Tuesday in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
That translates to nearly 2 million Americans with celiac disease.
Celiac disease is different from an allergy to wheat, which affects a much smaller number of people, mostly children who outgrow it.
Scientists suggest that there may be more celiac disease today because people eat more processed wheat products like pastas and baked goods than in decades past, and those items use types of wheat that have a higher gluten content. Gluten helps dough rise and gives baked goods structure and texture.
Or it could be due to changes made to wheat, Murray said.
In the 1950s, scientists began cross-breeding wheat to make hardier, shorter and better-growing plants. It was the basis of the Green Revolution that boosted wheat harvests worldwide. Norman Borlaug, the U.S. plant scientist behind many of the innovations, won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work.
But the gluten in wheat may have somehow become even more troublesome for many people, Murray said.
That also may have contributed to what is now called "gluten sensitivity."
Doctors recently developed a definition for gluten sensitivity, but it's an ambiguous one. It's a label for people who suffer bloating and other celiac symptoms and seem to be helped by avoiding gluten, but don't actually have celiac disease. Celiac disease is diagnosed with blood testing, genetic testing, or biopsies of the small intestine.
The case for gluten sensitivity was bolstered last year by a very small but often-cited Australian study. Volunteers who had symptoms were put on a gluten-free diet or a regular diet for six weeks, and they weren't told which one. Those who didn't eat gluten had fewer problems with bloating, tiredness and irregular bowel movements.
Clearly, "there are patients who are gluten-sensitive," said Dr. Sheila Crowe, a San Diego-based physician on the board of the American Gastroenterological Association.
What is hotly debated is how many people have the problem, she added. It's impossible to know "because the definition is nebulous," she said.
One of the most widely cited estimates comes from Dr. Alessio Fasano, a University of Maryland researcher who led studies that changed the understanding of how common celiac disease is in the U.S.
Fasano believes 6 percent of U.S. adults have gluten sensitivity. But that's based on a review of patients at his clinic - hardly a representative sample of the general public.
Other estimates vary widely, he said. "There's a tremendous amount of confusion out there," Fasano said.
Whatever the number, marketing of foods without gluten has exploded. Those with celiac disease, of course, are grateful. Until only a few years ago, it was difficult to find grocery and dining options.
"It's a matter of keeping people safe," said Michelle Kelly, an Atlanta-area woman who started a gluten-free, dairy-free, soy-free, nut-free bakery in 2010 after her son was diagnosed with celiac disease. While conventional bakers use wheat flour, she uses such ingredients as millet flour, sorghum flour, brown rice flour and tapioca starch.
At one of Atlanta's largest and busiest health food stores, Return to Eden, manager Troy DeGroff said over a third of his customers come in for gluten-free products for themselves or their family.
"Thank you, Elisabeth Hasselbeck," he said, referring to one of the hosts of the daytime talk show "The View" who helped popularize gluten-free eating.
It's hard to say how many of his customers have a medical reason for skipping gluten. But "they're at least paying attention to what they're sticking in their mouth," he said.
On a recent Friday afternoon, several customers bought gluten-free, though none had been diagnosed with celiac disease or had digestive problems from eating wheat.
Julia White said she picks up gluten-free items when her granddaughters visit. They've been diagnosed with problems, she said. "They don't just make this up."
Another customer, Meagan Jain, said she made gluten-free cupcakes with a school friend and liked the taste. But she doesn't buy gluten-free often because "it's expensive."
For her, "It's a fad. It's part of the eclectic, alternative lifestyle."
Gluten-free products are flying off grocery shelves, and restaurants are boasting of meals with no gluten. Celebrities on TV talk shows chat about the digestive discomfort they blame on the wheat protein they now shun. Some churches even offer gluten-free Communion wafers.
"I don't know whether there's more people getting this or that more people are noticing" they have a problem, said the Rev. Richard Allen, pastor at Mamaroneck United Methodist Church, north of New York City.
Or is it just another food fad?
Faddishness is a big part of it. Americans will spend an estimated $7 billion this year on foods labeled gluten-free, according to the market research firm Mintel. But the best estimates are that more than half the consumers buying these products - perhaps way more than half - don't have any clear-cut reaction to gluten.
They buy gluten-free because they think it will help them lose weight, or because they seem to feel better, or because they mistakenly believe they are sensitive to gluten.
"We have a lot of self-diagnosing going on out there," said Melissa Abbott, who tracks the gluten-free market for the Hartman Group, a Seattle-area market research organization.
Fads aside, research suggests more people are truly getting sick from the gluten found in wheat, rye and barley, but the reasons aren't clear.
In the most serious cases, gluten triggers celiac disease. The condition causes abdominal pain, bloating and intermittent diarrhea. Those with the ailment don't absorb nutrients well and can suffer weight loss, fatigue, rashes and other problems.
It was once considered extremely rare in the U.S. But about 20 years ago, a few scientists began exploring why celiac disease was less common here than in Europe and other countries. They concluded that it wasn't less common here; it was just under-diagnosed.
More recently, a research team led by the Mayo Clinic's Dr. Joseph Murray looked at blood samples taken from Americans in the 1950s and compared them with samples taken from people today, and determined it wasn't just better diagnosis driving up the numbers. Celiac disease actually was increasing. Indeed, the research confirms estimates that about 1 percent of U.S. adults have it today, making it four times more common now than it was 50 years ago, Murray and his colleagues reported Tuesday in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
That translates to nearly 2 million Americans with celiac disease.
Celiac disease is different from an allergy to wheat, which affects a much smaller number of people, mostly children who outgrow it.
Scientists suggest that there may be more celiac disease today because people eat more processed wheat products like pastas and baked goods than in decades past, and those items use types of wheat that have a higher gluten content. Gluten helps dough rise and gives baked goods structure and texture.
Or it could be due to changes made to wheat, Murray said.
In the 1950s, scientists began cross-breeding wheat to make hardier, shorter and better-growing plants. It was the basis of the Green Revolution that boosted wheat harvests worldwide. Norman Borlaug, the U.S. plant scientist behind many of the innovations, won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work.
But the gluten in wheat may have somehow become even more troublesome for many people, Murray said.
That also may have contributed to what is now called "gluten sensitivity."
Doctors recently developed a definition for gluten sensitivity, but it's an ambiguous one. It's a label for people who suffer bloating and other celiac symptoms and seem to be helped by avoiding gluten, but don't actually have celiac disease. Celiac disease is diagnosed with blood testing, genetic testing, or biopsies of the small intestine.
The case for gluten sensitivity was bolstered last year by a very small but often-cited Australian study. Volunteers who had symptoms were put on a gluten-free diet or a regular diet for six weeks, and they weren't told which one. Those who didn't eat gluten had fewer problems with bloating, tiredness and irregular bowel movements.
Clearly, "there are patients who are gluten-sensitive," said Dr. Sheila Crowe, a San Diego-based physician on the board of the American Gastroenterological Association.
What is hotly debated is how many people have the problem, she added. It's impossible to know "because the definition is nebulous," she said.
One of the most widely cited estimates comes from Dr. Alessio Fasano, a University of Maryland researcher who led studies that changed the understanding of how common celiac disease is in the U.S.
Fasano believes 6 percent of U.S. adults have gluten sensitivity. But that's based on a review of patients at his clinic - hardly a representative sample of the general public.
Other estimates vary widely, he said. "There's a tremendous amount of confusion out there," Fasano said.
Whatever the number, marketing of foods without gluten has exploded. Those with celiac disease, of course, are grateful. Until only a few years ago, it was difficult to find grocery and dining options.
"It's a matter of keeping people safe," said Michelle Kelly, an Atlanta-area woman who started a gluten-free, dairy-free, soy-free, nut-free bakery in 2010 after her son was diagnosed with celiac disease. While conventional bakers use wheat flour, she uses such ingredients as millet flour, sorghum flour, brown rice flour and tapioca starch.
At one of Atlanta's largest and busiest health food stores, Return to Eden, manager Troy DeGroff said over a third of his customers come in for gluten-free products for themselves or their family.
"Thank you, Elisabeth Hasselbeck," he said, referring to one of the hosts of the daytime talk show "The View" who helped popularize gluten-free eating.
It's hard to say how many of his customers have a medical reason for skipping gluten. But "they're at least paying attention to what they're sticking in their mouth," he said.
On a recent Friday afternoon, several customers bought gluten-free, though none had been diagnosed with celiac disease or had digestive problems from eating wheat.
Julia White said she picks up gluten-free items when her granddaughters visit. They've been diagnosed with problems, she said. "They don't just make this up."
Another customer, Meagan Jain, said she made gluten-free cupcakes with a school friend and liked the taste. But she doesn't buy gluten-free often because "it's expensive."
For her, "It's a fad. It's part of the eclectic, alternative lifestyle."
I wish I didn't have to bother and go out of my way to buy gluten free products for my daughter who has celiace desease. It's so expensive to be gluten freeÂ
You know how you can find the gluten free isle in the grocery store? Look for the guy with the gun in his mouth - because bullets are gluten free.
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Credit goes to John Pinette, who has literally hours of comedy about dealing with a gluten free lifestyle
Fad......just like everything else...people will jump on then off.
 @K00lGuy I WISH it was a fad!  truly I do.  It is so expensive to eat GF products.  My son has celiac so he HAS to eat this way for the remainder of his life.  A 4lb bag of flour that is already blended is 15 to 17 bucks.  It is insane! Â
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I can't imagine folks doing this for fad because of the price. Â Especially in this economy. Â Also, being GF isn't just wheat. Â It is Barley, Rye, etc. Â
@Amy Amy, you do know that it is hereditary, right? Even if the parents are asymptomatic, they should still be tested.
 @Conservative liberal yes.  My other children get tested as do I.  (my daughter has fruc mal.)
@K00lGuy
Yes, a lot of this is a fad. The actual numbers are about 1 in 100 for people that have some kind of gluten sensitivity based on the most recent studies that I have seen. When my wife and oldest son were diagnosed with celiac about 15 years ago we were told it was a "rare" occurrence by one doctor who sent us to a specialist. The specialist told us that it was much more common than most doctors thought due to out dated medical training. We have lots of problems going to restaurants and getting actual gluten free food because of the number of folks that think it is not an actual medical condition but a dietary fad. Last week my wife had her left foot amputated due to peripheral neuropathy. She will start chemo when she recovers for the intestinal cancer that was diagnosed last month. Both of these conditions are linked to celiac (moderately severe gluten intolerance). Fad diet, hardly for those impacted.
I went shopping today and saw "Gluten Free" Rice Krispies on a bulk stack of cereal as I entered the building. It made me chuckle honestly. I can understand people wanting to eat healthy but theres going to be something bad in everything you eat. What are the others that cropped up in the past ten years or so thats bad? High Fructose Corn Syrup is one I can remember at the moment.
I ate a gluten free cookie out of courtesy to a woman I knew trying new baking style, took a bite and the moment she turned her back I spit it out. It tasted, at least to me, like cardboard. Its not my thing but more power to people who do eat it and try it.
@DarkRenegade My son has Celiac Disease and has to stick to a strick gluten-free diet. It is not a fad for him. It is the only way he can stay healthy for the rest of his life. I am thankful that it has become somewhat of a fad, because it makes it so much easier to buy food that he can eat. Rice Krispies simply cashed in on the fad. For the most part, they were already gluten free, except for the malt flavoring, so I assume it was a pretty easy change. Similar thing with Chex cereals. They have always been gluten free, they just used good marketing and added that label to their packaging.
 @DarkRenegade And, to your HFCS comment, my daughter has Fructose Malabsorption.  Not only do I have to watch my son who has Celiac (which is preferable over FM) I have to watch my daughter and she can't eat 90% of the crap out there.  Including apples, pears, pitted fruits, some veggies, wheat, dried fruit, soda, fruit juice, etc.  anything that has a higher fructose content than glucose is out.  :/ Â
 @Amy I appreciate your input on the subject and I agree some medical concerns require people to make changes in their diet. I, personally, am allergic to certain milks that result in me drinking the Probiotic style since its the only milk that doesnt make me ill.Also that cookie I mentioned, I tried it about six months ago the day it was made. It was fairly fresh but still tasted the way I explained. Everyone's tastes are different for a reason when it comes to foods.
 @DarkRenegade I have tried certain things like crackers that have the cardboard texture and agree.  My son would gobble them up - wonder if over time as he changed his standards on taste because of lack of other stuff in his diet - make sense?  some of it is good though and I make those over the "regular stuff" for the whole fam.  but  the diet as a fad or whatnot - I don't know why folks would WANT to - as it is extremely expensive and kills our budget.  :/ Â
 @DarkRenegade I accidentally bought a box of those Rice Krispies. They were better than some of the other gluten free food I've tried.
 @DarkRenegade there are many good foods out there that are GF.  When I make it I get compliments all the time and those go rather quickly so there is proof rather than just someone being nice.  :)  But a lot of the older stuff that came out is cardboard tasting.  bleh.  but there have been great improvements!
People lose weight due to cutting calories. Period. I have been GF/DF for 4 years and last year I got injured, quit exercising, ate GF/DF and gained 20 poounds. Potato chips. popcorn, anyone??? I always laugh when people go GF to lose weight. Geez the GF stores are full of battered, high calorie goodies.
@commonsensegirl
Contrary to common wisdom, not all calories are the same. Think back to HS chemistry - did all chemicals, even all the granular white ones, react the same? No! Well, your body digests different molecules differently, too. (I'm sure most people would say, well, DUH! about that). Well, not even all sugars are digested the same. Glucose is burned in every cell in your body - it is "blood sugar," the sugar of life. No glucose, no human life. But Fructose, also called "fruit sugar" while also naturally occurring, is only digested in the liver, much like alcohol. In fact, it id digested in a metabolic pathway very similar to alcohol. So, if you eat a bunch of table sugar (a disaccharide of glucose and fructose), without fiber or anything to slow it's digestion, then the massive hit of fructose hitting the liver (much like slamming to much alcohol at once) triggers lots of bad things, including fat formation. A hundred calories of fructose consumed at once, with nothing else, will trigger much greater fat formation than 100 calories of glucose eaten the same way.
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Add to that, everyone is a little different - not just height, weight, taste-bud sensitivity, but a LOT of the details are a little different, too. (that's why one person is allergic to penicillin, another to nothing). Some is genetic, some is epigenetic, some is life-style triggered. Some people deal with fats much better than others, some with wheat. Feed an Eskimo a lot of wheat, heâll have problems; feed an Asian lots of animal fats, heâll have problems. Feed ANYone lots of fructose in a low-fiber diet, theyâll have problems. Everyone needs to know enough to learn how to listen to their own body, and figure out what details they personally need to pay attention to.
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Yes, cutting callories and getting more exercise is good to lose weight, but for some, there is a bit more to it that that.
If you really want to know how food impacts your body, I would recommend reading "It starts with food". I cut gluten and dairy out of my life over 18 months ago. Since then I've lost 35lb (exercise stayed the same), dropped 30% off my bad cholesterol, 20% off my glucose, and I feel great. The whole time I'm stuffing my face with things my body was meant to eat. For me it's not a fad, but away of life.Â
@Sean Johnson:"Glucose" is not a static number, so to claim you cut 20% off of it is garbage. There is a range of what is considered "good", and you are either in that range or not. It has nothing to do with percentages.
@Sean Johnson you lost weight due to cutting calories. Period. I have been GF/DF for 4 years and last year I got injured, quit exercising, ate GF/DF and gained 20 poounds. Potato chips. popcorn, anyone??? I always laugh when people go GF to lose weight. Geez the GF stores are full of battered, high calorie goodies.
 @Sean Johnson Gluten is proteins, small amounts too, and amino acids. Weight gain does not occur due to amino acids. Also, dairy is just sugar, so cutting dairy and cutting starch is why you experienced what you did.
My buddy's girlfriend is on one of these fad diets. She drinks beer and eats nothing but salty snacks.Â
@caphillkid beer isn't gluten free. nice try
 @commonsensegirl Nowhere in his statement are the words "gluten" or "free". Maybe some reading comprehension is in order?
I have Celiac Disease, and it is NOT fun - I had a blood test that confirmed it. I weigh 140 pounds on a good day. However, I can eat some gluten-based products without suffering a great deal of fatigue. I just have to avoid certain types of foods that have a high concentration of gluten, like white bread and the most common kinds of pizzas. (Though I admit, I occasionally raid the local Little Caesar's for a $5 pizza that tastes good.)
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I try to go for multi-grain foods, pasta that use natural ingredients such as Anne's Macaroni and cheese, and so on. It minimizes the effects of Celiac Disease while still enabling me to enjoy my favorite foods.
 @NKato You need an endoscopy to be tested for Celiac disease. You can use a blood test to find out if you have an allergy/sensitivity to gluten. They are not the same thing, but the treatment is the same: avoid gluten.
 @NKato there are gluten-free options for everything you listed above. You complain it's not fun yet you purposely harm yourself. smh
 @the  @NKato Have you actually tasted some of that crap? Â
In order to know if you have celiac disease you have to have a biopsy of your small intestine. I feel for those that really do have this problem. I also think people are way over reacting!
 @wynooheeman You can have a blood test too.
 @the blood test can only determine sensitivity/allergy.  Wynooheeman is correct about requiring a biopsy to determine if you have celiac disease.
It's so sad that people follow a gluten-free diet as though it's a fad. It makes others question someone if they truly have celiac disease or not. I have an allergy to dairy and eggs. Even just the tiniest amount of cheese makes my stomach very upset. Unfortunately, there are a lot of people that avoid dairy and eggs because they heard it would help them lose weight or whatever nonsense so a lot of people (especially people in food service industry) don't believe me when I ask for substitutions or omissions at a restaurant. I feel like I almost need to carry around my paperwork from my allergist that says I'm allergic to dairy and eggs.
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Plus, all that processed gluten-free stuff is just as bad for you as processed non-gluten free stuff.
I was having some health issues and went to many doctors who only gave me prescriptions that only suppressed the symptoms. With some help from an environmental illness doctor pointing me in the right direction, a change in my diet has done wonders. I said good bye to processed foods and gluten and started seeing improvements almost immediately. Bob's Red Mill has some great gluten free products and I just happen to be giving some away on my blog this week: http://gapey.blogspot.com/2012/07/gluten-free-sugar-free-oatmeal-cookies.html
 @gapey MD's did the same for me which was put me (for decades) on claritin, advair, , or steroid inhalers for my asthma. FOR YEARS I was on pharmaceuticals as that's what doctors do best, prescribe meds but not anything for * preventative* measures. Over 80% of diseases can be prevented and managed simply by diet and proper nutrition. Wheat and gluten is highly inflammatory which is what diabetes, heart disease and other ailments are; INFLAMMATORY. Body can't deal with it decade after decade until it starts turning in on itself. Food is either your medicine or poison.
Oh, and it's not the gluten-free diet that is making you lose weight, it's lowering your carbs. Want to know the craziest thing? I have a diet that actually works and it's never failed anyone I know that has stuck to it. I could write a book but it would be the world's shortest book ever. It's called eating fresh fruits and vegetables, eating lean protein, and limiting processed foods. Add 30 to 60 minutes of exercise per day at least 6 days a week and you are guaranteed to lose weight and keep it off. People don't want to hear the truth though. They are too lazy. They want a quick and easy fix. Haven't we all learned by now that there isn't any quick easy fix without consequences? I think people are getting dumber.Â
 @FremontTroll Oh, you mean the eat less crap and exercise diet?  Now, if only I could follow it.  The prednisone is not helping things any.  What can I say, I'm a carboholic.
 @stamperzann:Â
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I like your term, "carbaholic". Perhaps there shoudld be "carbaholics anonymous" groups?
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;o)
c'mon man we need an excuse it canât be all junk food processed food it taste so good.
If people would eat heather and try for awhile the junk really tastes and makes you feel bad. But it hard to change your habits and taste buds so it must be the gluten. Not salt sugar transfat bacon browniesand taste buds so it must be the gluten. Not salt sugar transfat bacon brownies .
 @bocabob:Â
Actually, you CAN "change your taste buds". When I was first diagnosed as a diabetic, I HATED the taste of the current diet sodas on the market. I was talking to my dietician one day about it, and he gave me excellent advice. Stick it out for 8 weeks. At that point, all the "old" taste buds that remembered how regular soda tasted will have been replaced by "new" taste buds that had never tasted it.Â
 @FremontTroll Yes indeed, you are hitting the nail on the head!  Bottom line is eat a balanced, healthy diet and take in fewer calories than you burn and you'll lose weight... take in more calories than you burn and you'll gain weight.  It really is pretty simple but like you said, everyone wants a quick, easy miracle cure...  Â
@FremontTroll
Man, I totally agree with you. We can thank all of the celebrities that people look up to, for touting all of this nonsense as well. A few years back when low carb/high protein was the craze, a pizzeria in Seattle even came out with a low carb pizza; it was basically a pizza without the bread! Check this out - http://www.razzispizza.com/menu/lowcarb.html
What a load of BS.
 @northwestsurfer  @FremontTroll Lol. Yeah I get so frustrated with these fad diets especially this one because I have a friend that really suffers from celiacs. He has to be really careful about what he eats and can't hardly even eat out. He gets really sick if he doesn't watch his diet, really malnourished. Funny thing is he's a big guy and has gotten bigger since he started living gluten-free.Â
@RN1 I have already tried different diets.
 @northwestsurfer My family and I go to a naturopathic doctor and have since my younger brother was diagnosed with Celiac Disease at 10 years old, and that was nearly 20 years ago.  My mom at that time was also found to be a carrier for Celiac Disease and Gluten Intolerance, but was only symptomatic when she was pregnant.  My dad is gluten and lactose intolerant.  I'm highly gluten intolerant (allergic), and the naturopath said it wasn't necessary to do any allergy testing because they know for a fact now that it is something that is highly hereditary.  My dad no longer has a functional thyroid because he wasn't diagnosed until he was nearly 60 years old, and by then the damage was already done.  My dad has to take two different thyroid medications every day, a b-12 shot every 3-4 days, and take several forms of vitamins and minerals every day to make up for what his body can no longer absorb on its own through foods. I've also lost all my teeth due to losing my enamel because we didn't know I was severely gluten intolerant until it was too late to do anything about it.  I'll be getting my first pair of dentures at 37 years old, because we didn't know it was hereditary 20 years ago when my mom and brother were diagnosed.  I have to listen to people behind my back say to their kids and other people that that's what happens when you use meth.  I've never even used drugs in my life, and it's highly upsetting to hear people make an assumption about someone they know nothing about. I'm severely gluten intolerant which is why I lost my teeth, because my enamel was eaten over time.  If we knew now what they didn't know 20 years ago, then maybe I'd still have my natural teeth and not have listen to a bunch of idiots making assumptions about things they know nothing about.
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@northwestsurfer, chill out. I was responding to @This_again?'s ignorant post.  This goofy new commenting system has some definite drawbacks, I have no idea why it tagged your name on my reply.  I was not preaching to you, so climb down off your own pity box. And yes, sounds like you and I have been through some similar experiences, i.e. jobs, relationship trouble.Â
@northwestsurfer I've known people with ADD or ADHD for who a radical diet change DID help the problem significantly. But, it's a complicated problem, and to expect a single solution is not realistic, like it might be with a bacterial disease that just needs the right antibiotic. If it didn't help you, that's too bad, but don't shoot down the idea for those that have nottried it, and are looking for ideas.
 @northwestsurfer:Â
There is a transdermal patch that came out a few years ago. He really liked it when it was approved, as it was a "smoother" treatment - there were no spikes & valleys as opposed to the oral meds he had tried. It is effective for approximated 12 hours - he could time the patch depending on what he was doing in a given day.
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He has begun to have a lessening of his symptoms, and has been off medication for 3 years now. He deals with his "fidgets" by doing a LOT of walking - it seems to help.
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He had been on adderall in the past, had a rare side effect from it, so he was very happy to be taken off of it.Â
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When he was first diagnosed, he was put on ritalin - it caused him to lose so much weight, the doctor put him on what we called the "eat fattening food diet". I would make milkshakes with pediasure & french vanilla ice cream for him, he had heavy whipped cream on his oatmeal in the mornings before school - any calorie was a GOOD calorie. It was horrible for me - I was trying to lose weight at that time!
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One thing that I can offer is try to "train" yourself with repetition. ALWAYS put your housekeys in the same place - it will become a habit, and eventually you will not lose them any longer. Small things like that help.
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I hope the adderall works for you. If not, work with your doctor to find a med that DOES work.  The patch (Daytrana) was the "magic pill" (so to speak) for us, after he had tried many other treatments.
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Good luck.Â
 @northwestsurfer  @queenofthenight  @FremontTrollÂ
Ah, I see what you mean now.
I'm actually not familiar with the whole gluten thing past having a friend with celiac disease. I only know two people who have gone gluten free for other reasons but it was more to help their children, than themselves. Their children are autistic and went gluten free under the supervision of their children's doctors.
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I'm just familiar with dietary changes to alleviate symptoms.
@LocalLady which treatment? Man, ADD has cost me so much over my lifetime. I was hyperactive as a kid but grew out of that. But the ADD will never go away. Just met with my doctor two weeks ago. Im on adderal now, but thats not going to fix everything
@This_again?
Have you ever driven down the road with two surfboards on the roof of your car that you forgot to strap down, only to find out a few miles down the road that they flew off and almost hit another motorist? Didnt think so.
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Ever left several hundred dollars worth of outdoor gear in a public spot cause you forgot them? Nah.
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Ever leave your keys to your apartment at work, only to find out when you got off the bus at home they were at work and you had to go back and get them (and your dog is inside and has been all day)
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Ever gotten fired from almost every job you had because you cant remember details and forget things constantly?
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You are full of crap and you havent got a clue what you are talking about
@queenofthenight @FremontTroll I have ADD and was also diagnosed as being biopolar. Im on medication for ADD. and also Lamotragine for the mood disorder. The BS part is that people adopt these diets and suddenly they are cured of everything, yet many of them have had no clinical research or dianosis done. Celebrities preach that they stop eating gluten and suddenly they feel so much better. People like Elizabeth Hasselbeck use their fame to promote gluten free diets and everyone suddenly is now gluten intolerant.
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I would love to know how many people have had food allergy testing done, or even spoke to a dietician before they adopt these popular diets?
@NorthEnd I suggest you reread my comment. I am 36 years old and I have ADD. Ive been on ritalin most of my adolescent and teenage life; Ive been on dexadrine, cylert, and immipramine. Now I am on Adderal. Dont sit there and preach to me about ADD; I know all about how it affects people. I've lost jobs because of it, relationships, and its cost me a lot of money and embarrassment.
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The fads we were talking about were diets americans adopt. Low car/high protein, gluten free, whatever the rage is of any given day. Get off your soapbox, and cry to someone else.
 @northwestsurfer  @FremontTroll
Dietary changes can help lessen symptoms of certain things like ADHD and Autism. There is also a belief that food allergies or sensitivities can mimic symptoms of ADHD, some say Autism as well but I haven't read up on that one. It doesn't necessary "fix" them but if they benefit from the dietary changes, then how is this BS?
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I have bipolar and medication has helped quite a bit but not without the addition of dietary changes.
 @This_again?  @northwestsurfer A fad? Really? So I've been living with a 'fad' I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy for 40+ years? ADD/ADHD is caused by differences in the structure of the brain. Go to the library and spend a couple of hours doing research in actual books, or if that's too hard, google 'ADHD PET scan images' and see for yourself how differently the ADHD minds function.
 @this_again?:Â
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ADD and ADHD are both *real* disorders. Unless you have a psychiatric research background & have done decades of research to prove otherwise, perhaps you should just be quiet about it.
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My son has ADHD. I spent YEARS dealing with it. It is nothing whatsoever about "conditioning". He was evaluated, even participated in a drug study that ultimately brought to market one of the current treatments being used.
@northwestsurfer ADD is just a fad... used to sell more drugs, you don't have ADD you are conditioned to think you do because the life people lead now is far different from the one we have evolved from.
@FremontTroll I know! My ex-gf would get bloated like a malnourished ethiopian baby every single time she ate bread with wheat. She went to a dietician who suggested she might be gluten intolerant. As soon as she stopped eating wheat, or food with gluten, her dietary problems went away.
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There are people who actually are gluten intolerant, but this bs that it fixes ADHD and any other non digestive alement annoys the hell out of me. I'm 35 and actually have ADD. Nothing except medication has ever helped me. Even back in the 80s, my mom tried special diets and nothing helped. These people are just causing more problems for people like my ex gf