This
digestive disorder causes damage to the small intestine when gluten, a
protein found in wheat, barley and rye, is ingested. People with the
disease need to follow a strict gluten-free diet for the rest of their
lives to avoid serious complications like osteoporosis and lymphoma, an
immune system cancer. It takes the average patient 10 years to receive
a diagnosis. And according to specialists, they are the lucky ones.
Studies show that 3 million Americans or 1 in every 133 people have
celiac disease. But 95% of them have yet to learn they have it,
according to the National Institutes of Health. “The entire disease
and all of its manifestations are incredibly under diagnosed,”
said Dr. Charles Bongiorno, the chief of the division of
gastroenterology and hepatology at the University of Medicine and
Dentistry of New Jersey. “Patients often have it for a decade or two
before they are diagnosed.” Celiac disease is often difficult to detect
because the symptoms vary so widely from person to person. Ten years
ago, the medical community thought it was a rare disorder that affected
only 1 in every 10,000 people, primarily children who had digestive
problems and failure to thrive.
Physicians now know that the disease is much more common. Most patients
never experience the so-called classic symptoms: bloating, chronic
diarrhea and stomach upset. Instead, the signs are often as nebulous as
anemia, infertility and osteoporosis. “It’s a problem,” said Dr. Ritu
Verma, section chief of gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition and
director of the Children’s Celiac Center at the Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia. “The majority of patients do not have the traditional
signs and symptoms. If someone’s only presenting symptom is anemia,
physicians will think of a hundred other things before they think of
celiac disease.” As a result, the condition is also commonly mistaken
for other ailments. Part of the problem is also a lack of education
among physicians, particularly internists. According to Dr. Bongiorno,
most primary care physicians are simply unaware of new research that
shows the disease is common and can manifest itself in unusual ways.
“They think it is an exotic malady,” he explained. “That persistent
fallacy causes a less-than-appropriate effort to order the right blood
tests and refer to gastroenterologists for care.”
In 2006, the National Institutes of Health started a campaign to raise
awareness of the disease among both the general public and physicians.
A goal was to increase rates of diagnosis because, unlike many
ailments, there is a definitive way to stop celiac disease from
progressing once it is recognized. “The vast majority of cases
experience a complete remission from symptoms once they are diagnosed
and go on a gluten-free diet,” said Dr. Stefano Guandalini, director of
the University of Chicago Celiac Disease Center. “So essentially, you
have no disease. That is what makes it all the more important to be
diagnosed.” And there is no better time to be on a gluten-free diet. In
2008, 832 gluten-free products entered the market, nearly 6 times the
number that debuted in 2003. Last year gluten-free
even emerged as a fad diet in the general population. Dr. Fasano said
gluten-free products used to taste like cardboard but had significantly
improved in recent years. “The only problem,” he said, “is that they
cost five or six times more than their normal counterparts.”
Researchers are also beginning to experiment with drugs that may be
able to block the immune response to gluten, much like a lactate pill.
If the clinical trials are successful, individuals with celiac disease
may be someday able to ingest small amounts of gluten. Source: New
York Times Health Guide
Posted
Jan 02 2010, 12:45 PM
by
Anthony Swetala