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  • Hello, and welcome to Zoe Shorts the Bite Size podcast where we discuss one topic around

  • science and nutrition.

  • I'm Jonathan Wolf, and I'm joined by my friend Dr. Bulsiewicz and today we're talking about

  • gluten.

  • There's a lot of fear-mongering out there about gluten.

  • Gluten is bad, is the message we're getting everywhere from the supermarket to social

  • media and all this anxiety can make it hard to get to the truth,

  • So Will.

  • Is gluten really as bad as everyone seems to think?

  • Well, Jonathan, there's now a good amount of science on gluten, and also there's a lot

  • of myths, so I think there's a clear answer, Jonathan, and we're gonna get into it.

  • All right?

  • I want to hear it.

  • We need to start Jonathan with what gluten is because there's so much misinformation.

  • Picture a chef stretching out a ball of dough at your favorite pizza joint, and they're

  • tossing it up into the air to make that perfect pizza base without gluten.

  • The dough would tear.

  • So it turns out that gluten is a protein that's naturally found in certain plants, such as

  • wheat, rye, and barley.

  • Cooks have loved it for millennia because it helps food keep its shape.

  • Gluten actually comes from the Latin word, meaning glue and humans have been using its

  • properties for long before even the Romans, it turns out Will.

  • So apparently the remains of a flatbread baked by hunter-gatherers fourteen thousand years

  • ago have been found by archeologists in Jordan, The gluten helped combine all the grains into

  • bread, which is presumably a lot easier to carry around on a hunting trip than a bunch

  • of seeds.

  • Yeah, especially since you didn't have any sort of bag to carry those seeds that easily

  • back then.

  • But anyway, it's quite difficult to separate gluten from wheat, barley, and rye.

  • So anything that contains these ingredients could potentially be problematic

  • And problematic because gluten is bad for you, right Will?

  • It causes gas and bloating and a whole host of other digestive issues.

  • Well, no, that's not strictly true.

  • What you're probably thinking of is Celiac disease.

  • As I understand it, Will, celiac disease is a very serious inflammatory condition that

  • affects a small intestine and its ability to absorb nutrients.

  • People with the condition can't consume gluten because it's going to trigger their immune

  • system.

  • Correct.

  • It was identified by a pediatrician during the Dutch famine of 1944 who noticed that

  • his celiac patients improved with the strict flower rations.

  • Untreated celiac disease can lead to severe diarrhea, abdominal pain, bloating Malabsorption,

  • infertility, weight loss, and even iron deficiency anemia.

  • It causes chronic inflammation inside the intestines.

  • So over time, it could potentially lead to cancer, even though that's very rare.

  • So it's an incredibly serious disease.

  • I remember my wife talked about it with patients that she's seen in the past and just sort

  • of how serious it is now.

  • This is something that you can go to the doctor and get a blood test.

  • Is that right?

  • It's important for people to know, Jonathan, that the testing doesn't have to be invasive,

  • particularly up front.

  • Many times the right place to start is with a blood test, and the blood test can provide

  • insights there is some additional confirmatory testing that may be required, but usually,

  • that's where we would begin.

  • And what's the treatment if you are diagnosed with celiac?

  • Well, there's only one treatment.

  • It's very clear, and that is the strict elimination of gluten from your diet.

  • You have to be gluten-free.

  • It's estimated that celiac disease affects at least one in a hundred people in both the

  • UK and us.

  • But interestingly, only about 30% of these people are currently clinically diagnosed.

  • I find that shocking Will that you're saying maybe 70% of people are not diagnosed, given

  • that it is such a serious disease and that you can change your diet to have such a profound

  • impact on your symptoms.

  • However, if it is only one person in a hundred has it.

  • Why do so many people think that gluten is bad for them?

  • Well, partly it's the general awareness and some of the fear that comes from the serious

  • effects of celiac disease.

  • There's no doubt about that.

  • But at the same time, there were some studies done that raised concerns about gluten going

  • back about 15 years ago, Jonathan, that concluded that gluten is inflammatory and it causes

  • bowel damage, which of course, fanned the flames of the gluten is bad narrative.

  • But the thing that people need to understand is that those studies were done in labs with

  • rats or in test tubes.

  • There's very little robust or high-quality evidence showing that gluten is bad when real

  • humans eat real food.

  • It's interesting because we talk often on this podcast about how you have to be very

  • careful before you assume that a study done on animals also applies to humans.

  • It sounds like we need to be very careful here when we're accepting those studies about

  • gluten as the truth for human beings.

  • Absolutely.

  • And here's the complicating factor.

  • Some people do have an adverse reaction to gluten-containing foods that are not due to

  • celiac, and they might experience fatigue or bloating, abnormal bowel movements, or

  • even a rash or neurologic symptoms.

  • So if it's not celiac disease, why the adverse reaction?

  • Well, there are three possibilities for a person who's having this type of adverse reaction.

  • Jonathan.

  • So I wanna run through them if we could.

  • , number one, you have side effects when you eat wheat, but importantly not when you eat

  • rye or barley.

  • So the first thing that you need to do in this case is to make sure that you don't have

  • celiac disease.

  • Any person who reacts to these foods should be tested for celiac.

  • But if there are symptoms only when eating wheat, that's more likely to be a wheat allergy.

  • Got it.

  • And I guess you do have symptoms when you consume gluten that is similar to Celiac disease,

  • so you are feeling bloated and you're getting abdominal pain, but you're not seeing the

  • positive blood test or some other evidence from the doctor.

  • So does this exist?

  • Yeah, this exists.

  • These are patients that I've taken care of.

  • Thousands of times throughout my career.

  • This is the most common scenario among people who have some sort of symptoms when they consume

  • gluten-containing foods.

  • And Jonathan, what we call this is non-celiac gluten sensitivity, or you could also call

  • it gluten intolerance.

  • And there's something really interesting about this.

  • It turns out that this condition which we're calling gluten intolerance, may not be gluten

  • at all.

  • You see wheat, barley, and rye.

  • These foods aren't just a big ball of gluten.

  • They contain other nutrients.

  • An example of this is fructans.

  • Fructans are a type of fiber that is called a FODMAP found in gluten-containing foods.

  • People may have heard of the low FODMAP diet.

  • They did a recent study comparing the effects of gluten and fructans to placebo and what

  • they found was that when people consumed gluten, it did not affect their symptoms at all.

  • But on the flip side, when they consumed the fructans, it actually triggered their symptoms.

  • We usually attribute these symptoms to gluten, but we probably should be attributing them

  • to fructans instead.

  • That's interesting cuz what that means is there might be lots of people listening to

  • this right now who think that they have this intolerance to gluten, but they're intolerant

  • to something else and in which case, switching to gluten-free food is a horrible mistake.

  • Cause they're just gonna eat lots more ultra-processed food; for no benefit.

  • Exactly.

  • And if you have symptoms eating bread, I have an interesting way that you could approach

  • this to test at home.

  • And the way that you do this is by eating sourdough bread because it turns out that

  • sourdough bread is low in fructans.

  • So like the fermentation process will reduce the fructan content, the sourdough bread still

  • contains gluten.

  • So if you consume sourdough bread and you have no side effects, Then you may have an

  • inversion to fructans rather than gluten, which means that the good news, here's the

  • bright side, you get to enjoy lots of yummy sourdough bread.

  • Brilliant.

  • So that was the first and second categories.

  • What's the third category Will?

  • The third category manifests outside of the digestive system, and it could be things like

  • neurologic symptoms, like poor muscle control or difficulty with balance.

  • We have a term for this.

  • It's called gluten ataxia.

  • Or it could be a rash with itchy fluid-filled spots that are occurring on your forearms,

  • on your knees, potentially your scalp, or your bottom.

  • We call this dermatitis or performs.

  • Now, these things just to be upfront, sound scary.

  • People need to know they are extremely rare.

  • These are far less common than celiac disease, and in fact, actually in the vast majority

  • of these people, If you test them, you will find that they do have celiac disease.

  • It's not just happening without celiac.

  • So either way, the solution is a gluten-free diet.

  • They both resolve on a gluten-free diet.

  • All right then Will, so what have we learned from all of this?

  • Is gluten really as bad as we've all heard?

  • From what you've told me, it seems like gluten for most people is not necessarily bad, despite

  • the huge numbers of people who've been cutting it out of their diets over the last decade.

  • Yeah, there's actually, evidence that would suggest that gluten-containing foods should

  • be a part of a healthful.

  • There's a 2017 study, Jonathan, of over a hundred thousand participants, and now it's

  • important to point out that these people did not have celiac disease.

  • And when they took a look, they found that there was no association between consuming

  • gluten and the risk of heart disease.

  • You would assume if gluten was truly in inflammatory food, it would increase our risk of these

  • conditions, but, in the study, those people who avoided gluten; actually increased the

  • risk of heart disease.

  • Most likely what's happening here is that they're reducing their whole grain consumption

  • when they go gluten-free.

  • This is problematic because whole grains contain many nutrients.

  • They could contain gluten, but they also contain many nutrients like fiber or B vitamins, magnesium,

  • and iron.

  • So, believe it or not, even the fructans that, you know, you and I were just speaking about

  • a moment ago and saying, yes, these fructans can cause your symptoms.

  • The fructans are a form of fiber.

  • They're probiotic, and they feed our good gut bugs.

  • And I think one of the things that are now clear to me that wasn't at all before is that

  • if you.

  • Are you diagnosing yourself as needing to eat gluten-free food and that isn't required?

  • That you start to switch to all of these things that you can now buy in the store that say

  • that they're gluten-free.

  • Most of these foods are incredibly processed, so like ultra processes, we would say.

  • And so you are swapping out foods that might.

  • Be whole grain that has all of this fiber for these things where we now know that not

  • only you potentially losing some of these nutrients, but these ultra-processed foods

  • can be very bad for you with these emulsifiers and sweetness that can affect your microbiome.

  • You know, you're trying to do something really good for your health, right?

  • You, you understand this thing is bad.

  • You're actively making these positive choices to buy this food that says it's gluten-free

  • and you are taking something which is gonna turn out for most people to be worse for them.

  • If they hadn't made this swap and I, am I catastrophizing here, or is that, do you think

  • that's fair?

  • Yeah.

  • I think that striving towards a diet of abundance where we prioritize getting a wide variety

  • of different foods, particularly plant foods into the diet, is, that's a central philosophy

  • with Zoe.

  • I think one of the other things with Zoe is quality.

  • Quality is, important.

  • Whether we're talking about gluten-containing foods or gluten-free foods.

  • Either way, one of the central messages that should be taken away from our podcast today

  • is that quality is important.

  • So if you're opting for gluten-containing foods, you want the high-quality gluten-containing

  • foods, you want that whole grain sourdough bread, you want that rye bread, you want that

  • barley.

  • If you're opting for gluten-free foods, this is where, once again, you just need to be

  • cautious not to be opting for those ultra-processed.

  • That's right.

  • And you're probably not wild on gluten having been separated by the food manufacturing process

  • in order to stick into a bunch of other foods as a glue, right?

  • One of my takeaways is there's nothing you're saying here to say like, gluten is a magically

  • good property of food.

  • Is that right Will?

  • It's more that there's no reason to think that it's harmful to most people.

  • I Think it's looking at the entirety of the food, Jonathan, and understanding that this

  • food is more than just gluten-containing and so that food matrix contains so many other

  • factors that we've touched on that include fiber and vitamins and polyphenols.

  • And this is why let's not focus so much on the gluten and moose side of the big picture,

  • which is like, what happens when you eat a piece of sour dope bread?

  • Does it nourish your body?

  • Does it feed your gut microbes?

  • The answer is yes, So let's enjoy that.

  • Wonderful.

  • In my case, not too often, but absolutely.

  • Will, I think the myth about gluten is pervasive.

  • I think that a lot of people will have, like me, learned a lot from this episode.

  • So it's been great to get into the science and I look forward to exploring more of this

  • in the future.

  • If you'd be listening to this episode and you'd like to try Zoe's personalized nutrition

  • program to understand your biology and understand what to eat to improve your health.

  • You can get 10% off by going to join zoe.com/podcast.

  • I'm Jonathan Wolf

  • and I'm Will Bulsiewicz.

  • Join us next week for another Zoe Podcast.

Hello, and welcome to Zoe Shorts the Bite Size podcast where we discuss one topic around

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