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  • - Hello.

  • (lighthearted, bouncy music)

  • You've probably heard a lot about gluten

  • in the news, right?

  • It's the stuff that makes bread chewy,

  • it's this protein formed by two chemicals,

  • glutenin and gliadin.

  • Humans have been eating this stuff

  • for at least 10 thousand years,

  • and it's one of the most heavily

  • consumed proteins on earth.

  • Recently though, gluten has become

  • the latest nutritional boogie man.

  • Anti-gluten evangelists claim

  • it causes everything from obesity to cancer.

  • Medical and nutritional experts, however,

  • take a dim view of these kind of claims.

  • So here are three of the biggest gluten myths

  • that they are trying to debunk.

  • Number one.

  • Lots of people are gluten intolerant.

  • Actually it's only a small number,

  • about one percent of the U.S. population

  • has a thing called celiac disease,

  • an auto immune disorder that

  • injures the small intestine and prevents

  • patients from absorbing other nutrients

  • from food when they ingest gluten.

  • And it can cause awful side effects,

  • from gastrointestinal distress

  • and chronic fatigue to anemia.

  • Additionally, another six percent

  • of the U.S. public may have

  • a controversial condition

  • called non-celiac gluten sensitivity,

  • or NCGS for those in the know.

  • Even for some people with NCGS,

  • gluten may not be the real problem.

  • In a 2013 study, researchers took

  • a group of people with NCGS

  • and they modified their diets.

  • They cut out a broad class

  • of nutrients called FODMAP's.

  • This includes everything from fructose

  • to like the fiber in bananas

  • and the fiber in asparagus.

  • When they cut this stuff out

  • of the patient's diets, the patients stopped

  • having gastrointestinal distress,

  • even when they ate gluten.

  • Okay, so maybe you need to stay away

  • from gluten because of celiac disease,

  • or NCGS, or maybe you're just convinced

  • that gluten is terrible for you.

  • Companies that manufactiure

  • gluten-free foods cannot wait to meet you,

  • and overcharge you.

  • Think about it, a bag of gluten-free

  • chocolate chip cookies, for example,

  • may cost close to five times as much

  • as the regular kind.

  • But you don't need to buy

  • a 13 dollar bag of cookies,

  • or a six dollar loaf of bread

  • to avoid gluten.

  • A lot of foods that naturally don't have

  • any gluten in them are all around you.

  • Stuff like fruits, vegetables,

  • meats, poultry,

  • I can keep going on,

  • fish, nuts, milk,

  • most cheeses, and yogurt,

  • herbs, spices, and oils,

  • butter, margarine, rice,

  • certain cereals, and

  • corn tortillas.

  • Eating a 100 percent gluten free diet

  • might be theoretically possible,

  • but according to National Foundation

  • for Celiac Awareness president Alice Bast,

  • in reality, it's nearly an impossible feat.

  • The FDA actually allows products to

  • be labeled gluten free even if they contain

  • gluten, up to 20 parts per million.

  • Furthermore, the FDA doesn't

  • actually require food manufacturers

  • to test their finished products

  • for gluten content.

  • The FDA reassures people with celiac disease

  • that all of this probably doesn't

  • put them at too much risk,

  • since research shows that most of them

  • can tolerate extremely small amounts of gluten.

  • However, for those who believe

  • that gluten is an intolerable poison

  • that must be avoided in any amount,

  • the reality is going to be difficult to swallow.

  • So, that's it,

  • and thank you for watching,

  • but what do you think?

  • Are people exaggerating the dangers

  • of this gluten stuff, or are they

  • ignoring a very real threat?

  • Let me know in the comments below

  • and for more information on this,

  • check out our article

  • The Ten Biggest Myths About Gluten

  • on HowStuffWorks.com.

  • Did we do it?

  • Are we hanging,

  • you can come out here.

  • Hey, were you back there the whole time?

  • - Yep.

- Hello.

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