Things You Need To Know About Celiac Disease - Page 8
Share the post
Share this link via
Or copy link

Bigstockphoto.com/Female baker
There has been a surge of Celiac disease awareness in recent years. This awareness has helped people become diagnosed, get the help they need, and, finally, understand why they’ve lived with pain and discomfort for years. It’s also left many people confuse. A lot of individuals have the symptoms associated with Celiac, leading them to self-diagnose, and sometimes cut out gluten for no reason whatsoever, while still failing to target their issue. Some people don’t believe that Celiac disease is even real (it is) simply because we rarely heard about it until the last decade or so. But there are a lot of conditions humans have suffered and even died from for centuries, that we really only came to understand in the 21st century. So here are facts about Celiac disease you should know, whether you have it or not.

Shutterstock
You’re born with it
You do not develop Celiac disease. It is an auto-immune disease, and you have it from the moment your little body enters this world. Some people think they develop it because symptoms can take decades to appear.

Image Source: Shutterstock
It cannot be cured
So before asking your friend who is complaining about their condition to “Just get some medicine” you should know that, they can’t. They simply have to avoid most of the food you eat.

Image Source: Shutterstock
It is different from gluten-sensitivity
Gluten-sensitivity and Celiac disease will produce many of the same symptoms (bloating, diarrhea, vomiting) but do not cause the same long-term issues. Only people with Celiac disease can struggle to absorb nutrients if they consume gluten.

Image Source: Shutterstock
A little history lesson
To show just how powerful this disease is, during World War II, when there was a bread shortage, incidents of Celiac disease went down. Naturally, they went back up when bread became once again widely-available.

Shutterstock
You can have it and not know it
Some individuals with Celiac disease never exhibit symptoms, but that isn’t to say that the disease isn’t harming them. Your intestines can suffer damage if you eat gluten and have Celiac disease, even if you do not suffer the immediate effects.

Image Source: Shutterstock
Yes, it’s very serious
If someone has Celiac disease, so much as a particle of wheat flour landing on their food can make them sick. So when your friend with Celiac asked if you cut any bread on the board that you’re now cutting her carrots on, she isn’t being difficult.

Image Source: Shutterstock
Celiac doesn’t always show up in your tests
You can actually test negative for the disease and still have it. So, if you exhibit the symptoms of Celiac disease, and you feel tremendously better when you don’t eat gluten, then disregard what the test says and just stop eating gluten.

Shutterstock
What is the real danger?
When someone with Celiac disease consumes gluten, their intestines can be damaged, making it difficult for them to properly absorb nutrients. The intestines may also leak into the bloodstream.

Shutterstock
There may be a correlation between Celiac and infertility
While there haven’t been conclusive studies proving that Celiac disease causes infertility, studies have found a prevalence of Celiac disease in women struggling to conceive who are unable to determine another cause of their fertility issues.

Image Source: Shutterstock
Celiac disease can cause cancer
Consuming gluten when one has Celiac disease can put you at a higher risk of developing lymphoma and small bowel cancer.

Shutterstock
Some symptoms are hard to catch
Celiac disease can cause symptoms clearly related to an intestinal condition, like bloating, constipation and vomiting. But the disease can also cause symptoms people don’t often associate with digestive diseases, like depression, skin rashes, fatigue and joint pain.

Image Source: Shutterstock
Diagnosis is complicated
While blood tests can often detect Celiac disease in people suffering advanced stages of the condition, intestinal biopsies are necessary to diagnose it in people only in the beginning stages.

Shutterstock
Misdiagnosis happens all of the time
Since the symptoms of Celiac disease are quite similar to those of Chron’s disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and colitis, it is often misdiagnosed.

Shutterstock
Diagnoses are on the rise
Within the past twenty years, the number of documented cases of Celiac disease has risen from about one in every 10,000 people to one in every 130 people.

Shutterstock
A few more symptoms to be aware of
Celiac can manifest itself in hundreds of symptoms. Here are some to look for: tingling of the extremities, sores in the mouth, changes in mood, yellowing or browning of the teeth, headaches, anemia, and delayed growth in children.
-
Beauty Of 5: Meet Wakati, The Newest Line Catered Specifically To Women With 4C Hair
-
She Tried It: Inahsi Naturals Aloe Hibiscus Leave-In Conditioner & Detangler
-
She Tried It: Ivy Park Drip 2 and 2.2 Black Pack
-
‘Always Work On Your Next Move’—Kandi Burruss Talks Leaving ‘Housewives,’ Broadway Wins, And Her Mogul Mindset
-
8 Famous Lesbian Women Who Were Married To Men
-
Angel Reese 1 Is Here: Inside The WNBA Star’s Debut Sneaker With Reebok
-
HIV Myth-Busters: Debunking The Biggest Misconceptions In Black Communities
-
Falling Behind On Crucial HIV Treatment? Here's How To Get Back On Track