What Is Celiac Disease?
Celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder. It happens when someone has a food intolerance to gluten. Gluten (pronounced: GLOOT-in) is the general name of proteins found in wheat, rye, barley, and other grains.
In celiac (pronounced: SEE-lee-ak) disease, the body can’t absorb important nutrients. If that happens, a person can become malnourished.
Doctors don't know for sure why the immune system reacts to gluten. But if you have celiac disease, there are ways to manage symptoms and prevent damage to the intestines.
What Are the Signs & Symptoms of Celiac Disease?
Celiac disease — also known as celiac sprue, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, and non-tropical sprue — can cause a wide variety of symptoms, such as:
- diarrhea
- constipation
- pale, foul-smelling stools (poop)
- belly pain and bloating
- weight loss
- tiredness
- headaches
- painful skin rashes, especially around the elbows and knees
Some people don’t have any symptoms.
Symptoms can happen at any time in a person's life. Some people have problems the first time they have gluten, but others get symptoms years after safely consuming gluten products.
What Causes Celiac Disease?
In celiac disease, gluten triggers the immune system to damage villi. Villi (pronounced: VIL-eye) are finger-like projections lining the small intestine that absorb nutrients from food and send them into the bloodstream. Damaged villi can't absorb important vitamins and minerals.
The cause of celiac disease isn’t known. It tends to run in families, so someone with a family history of the condition may be more likely to get it.
How Is Celiac Disease Diagnosed?
Diagnosing celiac disease usually starts with a blood test to look for antibodies to gluten and other proteins in the intestine’s lining. Antibodies are proteins the immune system makes that recognize and get rid of germs and other things it sees as threats. They usually stay in our bodies in case we have to fight that germ or problem again. If the blood test finds high levels of antibodies to gluten, the doctor probably will do a biopsy of the small intestine to send for testing.
To do a biopsy, doctors put a long, thin tube (called an endoscope) through the mouth and stomach into the small intestine to get a small tissue sample. A person usually is sedated or under general anesthesia to sleep through the procedure.
If someone is diagnosed with celiac disease, their siblings, parents, and grandparents should get tested too. They could have the disease but no symptoms. Celiac disease that isn’t found in adults for a long time can lead to serious health problems.
How Is Celiac Disease Treated?
There is no cure for celiac disease. Researchers are working on new treatments, and many show promise. But for now, the condition is managed with a gluten-free diet. This lets the intestinal lining heal, and helps ease symptoms.
Dietary Changes
If you have celiac disease, the doctor will guide you on which foods you can eat and which to avoid. These changes will have a big impact, so the doctor may suggest that you meet with a dietitian for advice.
Your diet should have no wheat, barley, rye, and related grains. No law requires food manufacturers to list gluten on food labels, so avoiding it can be hard. In the United States, all foods must be clearly labeled if they contain any of the top eight food allergens, including wheat. But wheat-free doesn’t mean gluten-free — some wheat-free products may have gluten-containing grains like barley and rye in them.
Carefully read food labels on all items before you buy or eat them. The Celiac Disease Foundation’s website lists many foods and drinks to watch out for.
Finding Safe Options
Here are some tips:
- Start with the foods you can eat. Safe foods and ingredients include foods made with the flours of corn, rice, buckwheat, sorghum, arrowroot, garbanzo beans (chickpeas), quinoa, tapioca, teff, and potato. Also OK are all plain meats, fish, chicken, legumes, nuts, seeds, oils, milk, cheese, eggs, fruits, and vegetables.
- Watch for cross-contamination. Sometimes, gluten-free foods can come into contact with foods that contain gluten (called cross-contamination). For example, crumbs from regular wheat bread can find their way into jams, spreads, or condiments if people aren't careful to use a fresh knife or utensil each time. Keeping condiments in squeezable bottles and using separate butter, jams, and spreads for people with celiac disease is a great idea. You might also keep a separate toaster for gluten-free bread.
- Clean appliances, utensils, and work surfaces before you make gluten-free products. Wash your hands well and often when you prepare food.
- In restaurants: Tell the server or the kitchen staff about your condition so they know that your food must be free of gluten and related ingredients.
- In grocery stores: Most carry some gluten-free bread, cereal, baking mixes, cookies, crackers and other products. Health food stores and natural food markets may have wider selections of these foods. Skip gluten-free products from bulk food bins because of the risk of cross-contamination.
What if I Do Get Something With Gluten?
Even with these precautions, you may ingest gluten at some point. That's OK — a single small exposure may cause mild inflammation in the gut, but probably won't lead to immediate symptoms. Normally, the lining of small intestine completely renews itself every 3–4 days. So after a single incident, new cells quickly replace damaged ones. Repeated exposure to gluten, though, will lead to ongoing damage of the intestinal lining.
What Else Should I Know?
Adapting to a gluten-free diet can be a challenge, especially at first. But over time, you will get to know which foods are OK and which are not, making it easier to find safe meals, snacks, and ingredients.
Remember that you’re not alone with these dietary problems. Your doctor might be able to recommend a local support group. Online support groups and organizations can help too, such as: