Guest guest Posted December 31, 2001 Report Share Posted December 31, 2001 Hi, there... I have a soon to be 18 year old daughter that has atypical autism and a niece that has confirmed Celiac Disease. We have had our daughter gluten free ever since our young niece's diagnosis. Jackie, my daughter, doesn't have Celiac but does have the sister disease of Dermatitis Herpetiformes which is the stubborn skin rash. It did get much better once we went gluten free but I am wondering if the enzymes might not give us even better results. How do I start, what do I look for, and where do I buy what I need? Thanks! Diane of Kansas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2001 Report Share Posted December 31, 2001 Hi Diane and welcome. There are a few people with celiac on this board and I hope they pop by to provide some personal perspectives. We do not have that in my family, but I will provide some suggestions and hope you get some guidance from them. We have been tracking trends on this board for about 8 1/2 months now...and unfortunately, none of the enzymes currently out help a person with celiac to resume eating gluten. Below is an excerpt from the 7 month report that explains this. I now have reports from 12 people with celiac and the results are very consistent. I have since run across some research that shows that the enzymes amylase and glucoamylase together have been shown to render gluten non-harmful to celiacs. The part of the gluten that is harmful to some people with autistic conditions is the protein (broken down by proteases), but the part of the gluten that is harmful to celiacs is the carbohydrate (broken down by a mixture of amylase, glucoamylase, maybe xylanase or hemicelluase too). This is not to say enzymes may not help overall because many here have found them beneficial. However, it appears that when a person with celiac consumes gluten with just proteases the reaction may be worse than when gluten is consumed without protease enzymes. As far as products, I use the enzymes Peptizyde and Zyme Prime from www.houstonni.com. In your particular case, I would encourage you to look at the EnzymAid Complete from www.kirkman.com and consider that product first. Ask for the trial size, runs about $3. The reason is that you can start with a little bit and see if enzymes will even help in meeting your goals. Also, it is a balanced product with both the proteases and carbohydrate enzymes in one capsule. Is dairy a problem for your daughter? The Complete will have some proteases in it for dairy as well. The Zyme Prime has proteases and the enzymes for the carbohydrates but not for the dairy. If you find that your daughter can tolerate the enzymes, then you consider other products or a larger size. Just trying to save you some money right off. I will also send you a file on what the different enzymes in each product are for, some inital possible effects and mixing suggestions. Ask away if you have any more questions. I would be very interested in hearing how your daughter responses. . ------------------------------------ At this time, Peptizyde/proteases do not appear to allow a person with celiac to return to eating gluten. Based on 7 cases where the person either knew they were celiac or suspected it. Celiac is a very serious condition, which often goes undiagnosed. So if someone sees regression with gluten + enzymes, particularly strong proteases such as Peptizyde, they are advised to consider celiac as a possibility. One mother knew her children reacted to gluten among many, many other foods. She started giving Peptizyde and Zyme Prime and carefully re-introducing foods one at a time and noted the reactions. For a few weeks, her children were doing well with 1 slice of gluten bread once each day. About the third week, her children started to regress and developed a noticeable rash. She withdrew the gluten and compared her children's rash to those of photos of the type of rash that often accompanies celiac, and concluded that her children were celiac. She has re-introduced many other foods, but remains gluten-free with the enzymes. She considers the enzymes to be very successful overall for her family. Two other mothers saw increased diarrhea with gluten + Peptizyde, but success with all other foods. One knew their child was celiac before and the other is now testing for it. It was found, in general, people with celiac reacted worse when taking gluten + Peptizyde than when consuming small amounts of gluten with no enzymes. Celiac is an autoimmune disease/condition with a genetic basis. There are certain sequences of peptides which cause a reaction in the small intestine of individuals with celiac disease. The peptides can be as small as 12 amino acids long (that's pretty small). These peptides are different than the peptides that get absorbed into the bloodstream and cause the opiate problem which are called gliadiomorphs. When the peptides get to the small intestine, the celiac's body registers these peptides as The Enemy. A non-celiac's body would just see the peptide as from gluten and let it pass. Once the celiac's body detects The Enemy, certain antigens are produced which increase T-cell production in the small intestine villi. This causes the villi to breakdown. There are three common theories being discussed as the cause for celiac and the specific amino acid sequences have not been identified. It is an autoimmune reaction with a genetic basis. Trying to get the enzymes to break down the proteins sufficiently so these peptides would not be produced was experimental. There is a certain structure in the gliadin that the small intestine sees as toxic in celiac individuals. The enzymes are not breaking this down in a way so that it does not cause a reaction in celiacs. So, in fact, taking a protease such as Peptizyde may be just making more of these little peptides (or whatever) available to the small intestine, and perhaps increasing the number of chances to provoke a reaction. There was some research on the www.celiac.com site which proposed this same thing with the use of barley enzymes although it also said this was just a working theory and there was no evidence to back it up. No two celiacs are alike in their dietary tolerances for gluten - some are very sensitive, some can tolerate a little at a time, some can't take oats or spelt or kamut, some can. So if a person suspects celiac, takes Peptizyde and gluten and doesn't do well, that person should avoid gluten under all circumstances. This is a different situation from the peptide/opiate problem which is caused by large, insufficiently broken down molecules and leaky gut. Those peptides have a certain structure that attaches to specific receptors in the brain. Celiac reactions are triggered by different tiny peptides which attach to receptors in the small intestine. Only celiacs will have intestines that react in this way. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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