Could You Have Celiac Disease? Blytheville AR

Some classic symptoms of celiac disease include chronic diarrhea or constipation, abdominal pain, gas and bloating. But other symptoms of CD may occur in places other than the digestive tract and can include: Loss of appetite, Fatigue etc.

Wm Bryant Nowlin, MD
479-443-9443
3000 N Market Ave Ste D
Fayetteville, AR
Stephen A Ziller
(501) 227-7688
8908 Kanis Rd
Little Rock, AR
Michael Hamilton Sifford
(870) 932-1198
300 Carson St
Jonesboro, AR
William Doyle White, MD
501-257-5300
900 N Hayes St
Searcy, AR
Dr.James Trice
(870) 536-3070
7005 South Hazel Street
Pine Bluff, AR
Charles Osborne Walker, MD
870-741-1542
8450 Pettit Ln
Harrison, AR
Jacob K Joseph
(479) 452-2077
6801 Rogers Ave
Fort Smith, AR
Terryl Jean Ortego, MD
479-770-8090
116 W Monroe Ave
Lowell, AR
Ivan Dodd Wilson, MD
501-686-5681
4301 W Markham St
Little Rock, AR
Gary Don Slaton, MD
501-623-4101
151 McGowan Ct
Hot Springs National Park, AR
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Could You Have Celiac Disease?

According to a recent study by the Mayo Clinic, celiac disease, a chronic intestinal disorder caused by a hypersensitivity to gluten proteins found in wheat, rye, barley and possibility oat products, is four times more common today than it was 50 years ago. Although the reasons for the increase are unknown, the Mayo researchers speculated that changes in the environment from the way wheat is grown and processed to reductions in exposure to germs and infections at an early age-also known as the Hygiene Hypothesis-may be contributing factors to the increasing number of cases of celiac disease (CD).

While it's estimated that one in 133 Americans have CD, making it one of the most common causes of chronic inflammation of the digestive system, the disorder often goes undiagnosed and, as a result, is left untreated. In other cases, the gastrointestinal problems associated with CD, such as stomachaches and diarrhea, are often blamed on other common ailments such as food allergies. As a result, they end up being misdiagnosed. However, if left untreated, CD sufferers have a four-fold increased risk of earlier death than treated patients, according to the Mayo study.

What to Look For

While healthy people have no problem digesting gluten-containing foods, in CD sufferers the immune system is abnormally activated by gluten, which triggers an inflammation response in the small intestine. Eventually, this autoimmune response results in the partial or complete flattening of the villi, the tiny hair-like projections that absorb nutrients from foods. Left untreated, the malabsorption of nutrients can result in a constellation of maladies from skin rashes, chronic fatigue and osteoporosis to infertility and lymphoma...

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