Coping with wheat intolerance

Wheat intolerance (allergic response)

An allergic reaction is somewhat like a case of mistaken identity by your body’s immune system.

Normally, your immune system generates antibodies to protect your body against bacteria, viruses or toxic substances. If you have wheat allergy, however, your body generates an allergy-causing antibody to attack a certain protein found in wheat. Simply put, your immune system has mistakenly identified this protein as something that could harm you.

Once your body has developed an allergy-causing antibody to a particular agent (allergen) — in this case, a wheat protein — your immune system has been rewired to destroy it. That’s why, when you eat wheat, your immune system mounts an attack.

There are four different classes of proteins in wheat that can cause allergies: albumin, globulin, gliadin and gluten. Any of them can cause an allergic reaction.

Sources of wheat proteins

Some sources of wheat proteins are obvious, such as bread, but all wheat proteins — and gluten in particular — may be used in a number of prepared foods. Foods that may include wheat proteins include:
 
• Breads
• Cakes and muffins
• Breakfast cereals
• Pasta
• Couscous
• Crackers
• Beer
• Hydrolyzed vegetable protein
• Soy sauce
• Condiments, such as ketchup
• Meat, crab or shrimp substitutes
• Coffee substitutes
• Meat products, such as hotdogs
• Dairy products, such as ice cream
• Natural flavorings
• Gelatinized starch
• Modified food starch
• Vegetable gum
 

If you have a wheat allergy, you may also be allergic to other grains with similar proteins. These related grains include barley, oats and rye.

If you struggle with wheat protein intolerance(s), avoiding or limiting the above foods will decrease inflammation in the body, help keep weight off and help you to feel better overall.

Try grains or grain-like products new to you such as (to read more go to http://www.livrite.com/wholegrains.htm) :

1. Kamut – a relative of wheat that reportedly tastes better than wheat and is nutritionally superior.
2. Quinoa – not a grain but related to beets and spinach.  It is known for it’s light taste and easy digestion, it is high in vitamins and is a complete protein having all 8 amino acids.
3. Amaranth – a grain with complete protein and with content as high as 12 – 17%; high in fiber; studies link to its ability to lower cholesterol.
4. Spelt – a complete protein and a relative of wheat; known for its easy digestion.
5. Rice – non-allergenic and gluten-free, complex carbohydrate with vitamins and minerals

Sources:
MayoClinic.com. Wheat allergy; Causes.  http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/wheat-allergy/DS01002/DSECTION=causes.  Accessed Aug. 2010
Wheat and joint pain. Dr. Nathan Wei. http://www.arthritis-treatment-and-relief.com/wheat-and-joint-pain.html Accessed Aug. 2010
Nutrition facts about rice. http://www.rice-trade.com/rice-nutritional-facts

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Bad diets out, nutrient density in

Joel Fuhrman MD talks about diets that don’t work, and nutrient density as the key to healthy eating.  Follow his advice and find a more energetic life.

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Can we starve cancer?

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Study: weight gain shrinks brain

A new Livescience.com article reports that obese people have 8 percent less brain tissue than normal-weight individuals. Their brains look 16 years older than the brains of lean individuals, researchers said.

Those classified as overweight have 4 percent less brain tissue and their brains appear to have aged prematurely by eight years.

The results, based on brain scans of 94 people in their 70s, represent “severe brain degeneration,” said Paul Thompson, senior author of the study and a UCLA professor of neurology.

“That’s a big loss of tissue and it depletes your cognitive reserves, putting you at much greater risk of Alzheimer’s and other diseases that attack the brain,” said Thompson. “But you can greatly reduce your risk for Alzheimer’s, if you can eat healthily and keep your weight under control.” [Read more...]

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Living lazy = living large


Teen Obesity: Lack of Exercise May Not Be to Blame
By Alice Park of TIME magazine

You don’t have to spend much time with teenagers to know that the average adolescent would rather devote an afternoon to sitting in front of the TV, computer or video-game console than working out in a gym. And in recent years, as physical-education classes have been progressively cut from cash-strapped public-school curriculums, teens have had even more time to lounge, slouch, hang out or do anything but break a sweat.

It’s no surprise, then, that obesity rates among U.S. youngsters have skyrocketed, tripling from 1976 to 2004. Public-health experts and obesity researchers attribute the trend in part to kids’ increasingly sedentary lifestyles. As teens spend more and more time anchored before a screen — burning fewer and fewer calories each day — they’re storing more of that unused energy as fat. Hence, the ballooning rates of obesity. (See TIME’s video “Obesity and Social Networks.”) [Read more...]

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