Текущее время: Ср ноя 27, 2024 9:00 pm
Модератор: Модераторы
Alexandr K. писал(а):вполне возможно.. насколько знаю у многих американцев аллергия на арахис, а все потому что поколение до этого обьедалось батониками с арахисом (сорри если бред )
Gattino писал(а):Светлана, у меня вопрос :) - почему именно глютен? а не другие виды белков? почему именно пшеница? что плохого в этом белке? или просто поедание пшеницы килограммами в течение столетий-тысячелетий привели к такому результату?
MorNat писал(а):Gattino писал(а):Светлана, у меня вопрос - почему именно глютен? а не другие виды белков? почему именно пшеница? что плохого в этом белке? или просто поедание пшеницы килограммами в течение столетий-тысячелетий привели к такому результату?
"A recent large study in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that people with diagnosed, undiagnosed, and "latent" celiac disease or gluten sensitivity had a higher risk of death, mostly from heart disease and cancer. (i)
This study looked at almost 30,00 patients from 1969 to 2008 and examined deaths in three groups: Those with full-blown celiac disease, those with inflammation of their intestine but not full-blown celiac disease, and those with latent celiac disease or gluten sensitivity (elevated gluten antibodies but negative intestinal biopsy).
The findings were dramatic. There was a 39 percent increased risk of death in those with celiac disease, 72 percent increased risk in those with gut inflammation related to gluten, and 35 percent increased risk in those with gluten sensitivity but no celiac disease.
This is ground-breaking research that proves you don't have to have full-blown celiac disease with a positive intestinal biopsy (which is what conventional thinking tells us) to have serious health problems and complications--even death--from eating gluten.
Yet an estimated 99 percent of people who have a problem with eating gluten don't even know it. They ascribe their ill health or symptoms to something else--not gluten sensitivity, which is 100 percent curable.
The question that remains is: Why are we so sensitive to this "staff of life," the staple of our diet?
There are many reasons ...
They include our lack of genetic adaptation to grasses, and particularly gluten, in our diet. Wheat was introduced into Europe during the Middle Ages, and 30 percent of people of European descent carry the gene for celiac disease (HLA DQ2 or HLA DQ8), (xii) which increases susceptibility to health problems from eating gluten.
American strains of wheat have a much higher gluten content (which is needed to make light, fluffy Wonder Bread and giant bagels) than those traditionally found in Europe. This super-gluten was recently introduced into our agricultural food supply and now has "infected" nearly all wheat strains in America."
Я думаю, что это не только в Америке
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