For The Latest Medical News, Health News, Research News, COVID-19 News, Pharma News, Glaucoma News, Diabetes News, Herb News, Phytochemical News, Thailand Cannabis News, Cancer News, Doctor News, Thailand Hospital News, Oral Cancer News, Thailand Doctors
At present there is no cure or specific medicinal treatment for celiac disease. The present treatment of celiac disease revolves around making the diet completely free of gluten that induces hypersensitivity and brings on symptoms.
In patients with celiac disease, gluten free diet must be adhered to for life. Primarily wheat, barley, and rye are avoided.
In 95% of patients with celiac disease, oats are not toxic but less than 5% patients with celiac disease or with dermatitis herpetiformis, oats may also trigger symptoms and need to be avoided.
Further many commercially available oats are not completely free of contamination with other grains and are thus not generally advised.
Diet is based on rice and corn as staple cereals. Gluten free foods include rice, corn, sorghum, millet, buckwheat, beans, peas, quinoa, potatoes, soybean, tapioca, amaranth, nuts, fruits, milk and dairy products, meat, fish, eggs etc.
The initial approach is to prepare natural and gluten free diets with the help of a diet advisor or support groups. Apart from diet advice the factors to be kept in mind are:-
The response to a gluten-free diet in terms of improvement in symptoms is rapid among most patients (within 2 weeks). The rate of response varies between patients. The quality of life significantly improves on a gluten-free diet with marked improvement in symptoms. Adolescents may have difficulty in complying with the gluten free diet.
In 2006, the American Dietetic Association updated its recommendations for a gluten-free diet.
Symptoms may persist despite initiation and maintenance of gluten free diets. The persistence of symptoms is almost always caused by continued ingestion of gluten. Reasons for persistence of symptoms thus includes:-
Patients presenting with severe symptoms need hospital admission along with intravenous fluid supplementation, electrolytes administration, parenteral nutrition and occasionally, steroids.