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Although the symptoms of desert can vary…
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Celiac disease is an intestinal absorption problem…
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What Should Be Done After a Celiac…
Alas, Celiac! What will happen now?
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The only cure for celiac disease is a gluten-free diet. Patients need to maintain strict gluten-free meals for life. People diagnosed with celiac disease as a result of clinical symptoms, serological tests, and small bowel histology should immediately start a gluten-free diet. He should stay away from the consumption of wheat, barley, rye and oat foods and beverages that should eliminate gluten from his life. Gluten-containing and iced tea such as white bread, whole wheat bread, bran bread and pasta, bulgur are not consumed in the gluten-free diet. It should be used with gluten-containing foods, which we call cross contamination, which do not contain gluten, but in this utility, attention should be paid to gluten contaminated contents.
Serological, hematological and biochemical tests (complete blood count, iron profiles, thyroid tests, calcium, magnesium, zinc, B12, folic acid and vitamin D) density and dietary compliance should be monitored. It is also important in follow-up in children.
Transglutaminase needs to be measured in a certain way to observe the effect of gluten-free treatment. If there are serological findings that do not improve at the end of a year, it should be considered that there is contamination in the diet. Serological tests are considered as a symptom of reaching normal levels, and it is known that the fastest serological tests in celiac disease reach their normal values in the 6th month and the slowest at the end of the 1st year.
A gluten-free diet should be followed very strictly. Very low amounts of gluten can cause clinical symptoms to persist. Celiac patients and their relatives should be well aware of the free, unfavorable foods that are included in the gluten-free diet and which should be controlled.
Dietician Armoni Yılmaz
REFERENCES
Guide to Diagnosis, Treatment and Follow-up for Family Physicians in Celiac Disease, 2019
KULOĞLU, Z. (2014). Celiac disease. Turkish Journal of Pediatrics, 8 (2), 105-111.
Öztürk, Y. E., Uyar, G. Ö., Serin, Y., & Gürkan, Ö. E. (2018). Gluten-Free Diet Treatment in Celiac Disease: A Case Report. Journal of Nutrition and Diet, 46 (3), 320-324
Alas, Celiac! What will happen now?
The only cure for celiac disease is a gluten-free diet. Patients need to maintain strict gluten-free meals for life. People diagnosed with celiac disease as a result of clinical symptoms, serological tests, and small bowel histology should immediately start a gluten-free diet. He should stay away from the consumption of wheat, barley, rye and oat foods and beverages that should eliminate gluten from his life. Gluten-containing and iced tea such as white bread, whole wheat bread, bran bread and pasta, bulgur are not consumed in the gluten-free diet. It should be used with gluten-containing foods, which we call cross contamination, which do not contain gluten, but in this utility, attention should be paid to gluten contaminated contents.
Serological, hematological and biochemical tests (complete blood count, iron profiles, thyroid tests, calcium, magnesium, zinc, B12, folic acid and vitamin D) density and dietary compliance should be monitored. It is also important in follow-up in children.
Transglutaminase needs to be measured in a certain way to observe the effect of gluten-free treatment. If there are serological findings that do not improve at the end of a year, it should be considered that there is contamination in the diet. Serological tests are considered as a symptom of reaching normal levels, and it is known that the fastest serological tests in celiac disease reach their normal values in the 6th month and the slowest at the end of the 1st year.
A gluten-free diet should be followed very strictly. Very low amounts of gluten can cause clinical symptoms to persist. Celiac patients and their relatives should be well aware of the free, unfavorable foods that are included in the gluten-free diet and which should be Dietician Armoni Yılmaz
Alas, Celiac! What will happen now?
The only cure for celiac disease is a gluten-free diet. Patients need to maintain strict gluten-free meals for life. People diagnosed with celiac disease as a result of clinical symptoms, serological tests, and small bowel histology should immediately start a gluten-free diet. He should stay away from the consumption of wheat, barley, rye and oat foods and beverages that should eliminate gluten from his life. Gluten-containing and iced tea such as white bread, whole wheat bread, bran bread and pasta, bulgur are not consumed in the gluten-free diet. It should be used with gluten-containing foods, which we call cross contamination, which do not contain gluten, but in this utility, attention should be paid to gluten contaminated contents.
Serological, hematological and biochemical tests (complete blood count, iron profiles, thyroid tests, calcium, magnesium, zinc, B12, folic acid and vitamin D) density and dietary compliance should be monitored. It is also important in follow-up in children.
Transglutaminase needs to be measured in a certain way to observe the effect of gluten-free treatment. If there are serological findings that do not improve at the end of a year, it should be considered that there is contamination in the diet. Serological tests are considered as a symptom of reaching normal levels, and it is known that the fastest serological tests in celiac disease reach their normal values in the 6th month and the slowest at the end of the 1st year.
A gluten-free diet should be followed very strictly. Very low amounts of gluten can cause clinical symptoms to persist. Celiac patients and their relatives should be well aware of the free, unfavorable foods that are included in the gluten-free diet and which should be controlled.
Dietician Armoni Yılmaz
REFERENCES
Guide to Diagnosis, Treatment and Follow-up for Family Physicians in Celiac Disease, 2019
KULOĞLU, Z. (2014). Celiac disease. Turkish Journal of Pediatrics, 8 (2), 105-111.
Öztürk, Y. E., Uyar, G. Ö., Serin, Y., & Gürkan, Ö. E. (2018). Gluten-Free Diet Treatment in Celiac Disease: A Case Report. Journal of Nutrition and Diet, 46 (3), 320-324