By Sayer Ji
Contributing Writer for Wake Up World
With
sales of foods labeled gluten free now reaching over 6 billion dollars a
year, something truly profound is happening to the way in which
Americans are perceiving the role of wheat in their diets. Once
celebrated as the very poster-child of the health food movement, folks
are increasingly rejecting this “king of grains,” and are now
identifying it as being at the very root of their health problems.
Detractors
claim that the movement is just a fad, or worse, that those who have
embarked upon it without an official diagnosis are a bit crazy. After
all, simply “feeling better” following gluten elimination is not
considered to be proof of anything within the conventional medical
system. Biopsies, antibody, and genetic tests later, if nothing is
found, and you still think gluten – this ‘sacred,’ omnipresent grain –
is a problem, you might just get referred to a psychiatrist.
But
anecdotes and “subjective experience” aside, the type of clinical
research that constitutes “Truth,” with a capital T, from the
perspective of the dominant medical establishment, can be found on the
National Library of Medicine’s biomedical database known as MEDLINE. This vast bibliographic archive contains over 21 million citation entries, which as of time of this writing, contains 9,776 references to gluten.
There
has been a sharp increase in interest and research on the topic of
“gluten intolerance” – although we prefer to label the subject “gluten
toxicity,” in order to shift the focus away from the “victim” back to
the “aggressor,” the gluten itself. In 1971, there were 71 studies
listed on MEDLINE which referenced gluten. Last year in 2011, there were
514.
One of our many interests at GreenMedInfo.com is to identify “Problem Substances,” which is why we have created an index by that name with 698 subjects listed from A-Z. If you navigate to WHEAT under
the “W’s” you will find a list under “Advanced Topics” with 205 health
conditions and/or adverse health effects associated with wheat
consumption, all of which were determined solely through research in
peer-reviewed and published medical journals indexed on MEDLINE.
You
will also find, below the listed diseases, a “pharmacological actions”
field set which lists 20 distinct ways in which wheat harms the body,
e.g. nerve-damaging (neurotoxic), immune-damaging (immunoreactive),
inflammatory, etc.
At present, the
conventional medical establishment only identifies a handful of
disorders likely to be caused by wheat consumption, such as:
- Wheat Allergy
- Celiac Disease
- Dermatitis Herpetiformis
- Exercise-Induced Wheat Anaphylaxis
No comments:
Post a Comment