Guest guest Posted February 25, 2005 Report Share Posted February 25, 2005 >Ergo IgA intolerance *CANNOT* >> account for all the possibly-IgA-related health problems out there. >> >> Heart disease, impaired digestion, >>obesity, diabetes, syndrome X, etc., must by virtue of >> this simple statistical fact have other causes, whether or not IgA >> intolerance is one cause for some people. : I agree, and I don't recall saying otherwise. If you take one subset of people .... those with IBS for example ... and give them IgA antigliadin tests, you will find a higher percentage have IgA intolerance than the population at large. Not ALL of them will have it, but where the blood tests show 10% for the average American, the subset of those with IBS will show, say, 40%, which makes it logical to test for it. Having the DQ8 or DQ2 gene predisposes you to having certain diseases if you have those genes AND you eat gliadin. If you have those genes and don't eat gliadin, no problems from THAT source. It's a genetic die off issue ... those genes have already died off in populations that have been eating wheat for 5,000 years. So it makes sense, to me, to know which camp you are in. I'd say the same thing if there were a gene that predisposes one to have problems with tomatoes ... if you have that gene, it's better not to eat tomatoes. Also, if you have a big group of people with problems like that, it skews the statistical results of epidemiological studies., which was what I was trying to say in regard to the Finns. The Finns are one group where wheat was introduced *extremely* recently, and they, along with the Scotch and Irish, have big wheat problems, statistically. Any group of humans that are eating foods that don't get along with them genetically, will be less healthy than they would be otherwise, regardless of the innate nutritional value of the food. Which is NOT the same thing as saying " gluten intolerance causes everything " , which you seem to think I believe? > Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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