Daily Mail

Should you ditch gluten?

Stars such as Gwynnie swear giving up wheat makes them slimmer and healthier — and some doctors think they’re right. Now this compelling series reveals all you need to know ...

- By Louise Atkinson

WHAT do glossy Gwyneth Paltrow, the enticing Hemsley sisters and fresh-faced Ella Woodward have in common? The answer’s simple: they all have a vehement antipathy to wheat. These cookbook queens would no sooner let a baguette pass their lips than admit they didn’t really like the taste of that trendy grain du jour, quinoa. Why? Well, firstly, when you ditch wheat and, more specifical­ly, other food products containing gluten — the protein found in wheat — you generally lose weight. And lots of it.

Indeed, many of the most popular weight-loss diets, such as Paleo, Atkins and Dukan, are founded on the principle of cutting right back on gluten. Just look at the tiny figure of Victoria Beckham to see what sustained avoidance of the stuff can do to your waistline.

But there’s more to the glutenfree trend than weight loss.

This breed of healthy- living advocates say not eating gluten makes them feel healthier, lighter, less sluggish. Tennis star Novak Djokovic even claims giving up gluten has sharpened up his game.

So should you give up gluten? Could ditching bread, pasta and cakes help you feel as glowing as Gwynnie or as determined as Djokovic?

In this three-part series, we’ll be asking whether the gluten-free craze is just faddishnes­s, fuelled by clever marketing, as well as speaking to those who say that going without it has been transforma­tional.

And we’ll guide you through the gluten maze with our quiz, which will reveal if your life could be changed for the better if you gave up gluten.

So why, if you’re not actually allergic to gluten, would you give it up?

There’s a growing belief large numbers of us struggle to metabolise gluten effectivel­y. Some experts believe our delicate digestive systems may not be robust enough to tolerate modern, industrial­ly produced wheat — certainly not in the quantities in which it’s typically consumed.

And so, slowly, consumers have begun turning away from gluten, leading to a boom in the ‘free-from’ supermarke­t sector.

A recent report found that 60 per cent of people purchase or consume at least some gluten-free products and one household in ten — that’s some 2.7 million — contains someone who believes gluten is bad for them.

yET if you ask your GP what they think about giving up bread, you are likely to get short shrift. Most doctors believe that gluten causes problems only if you have coeliac disease, where the immune system reacts to gluten, damaging the gut and preventing vital nutrients from being absorbed. Coeliacs have to follow a gluten-free diet for life to prevent long-term problems.

But coeliac disease affects only one in 100 people in the UK — an estimated 125,000. Although this figure is on the rise (up from one in 8,000 in the Fifties), it represents a small sector of the population compared with the vast numbers trying to avoid gluten right now.

Medical experts are divided on whether this surge in going glutenfree is a sensible response by people who’ve found their own cure for dietary discomfort — or just plain crazy.

Some, like Dr Peter Green, a U.S. coeliac specialist and author of Gluten Exposed, believe the world has gone mad.

He is emphatic: the popularity of going without gluten has been fed by endorsemen­ts from athletes and actors, which, he says, ‘ speaks to our infatuatio­n with celebritie­s and fad diets’. He also points to the placebo effect — that people giving up gluten are seduced by their desire to believe in something so passionate­ly that it works.

Dr Green warns of a gluten-free con. ‘In the past few years gluten has become the ultimate villain,’ he says, ‘It is implicated in everything from heart disease, neuralgia, sore muscles, exhaustion, brain fog, headaches, autism, diabetes, arthritis, curious rashes, schizophre­nia, dementia, weight loss, fibromyalg­ia and irritable bowel syndrome to plain “it makes me feel sick-itis”.’

Yet, he says, ‘most of these claims do not stand up’. Too many people, he says, are bundling coeliac disease in with dietary fads.

But other experts, such as Professor David Sanders, author of Gluten Attack, argue that it really can trigger gut problems in large numbers of people — sometimes without them realising.

His proof? The stream of patients he has seen over many years in his clinic ‘who do not have coeliac disease, but say they have symptoms such as bloating, pain, diarrhoea, constipati­on and feeling sluggish when they eat gluten’.

He has come to accept the possibilit­y of an in-between condition he terms ‘coeliac lite’ — someone for whom coeliac disease has been ruled out, but whose symptoms improve on a gluten-free diet.

Some specialist­s refer to it as gluten sensitivit­y, non-coeliac gluten sensitivit­y, or wheat or gluten intoleranc­e.

‘ However,’ he says, ‘ This is something we are only beginning to understand.

‘It was only when I stepped away from what I was taught didactical­ly during medical training and instead asked open questions about what I was seeing and hearing from my patients that I came around to this way of thinking.’

Professor Sanders’s research has shown that many of these ‘coeliaclit­e’ patients are female, in their 30s to 40s, with a high prevalence of irritable bowel type symptoms. In other words, the exact market that clean-eating gurus such as Gwyneth Paltrow are trying to seduce.

Professor Sanders admits that the idea of ‘gluten sensitivit­y, or coeliac lite, is a controvers­ial one — for now. But the fact is our understand­ing of what happens in the gut is evolving rapidly.’

This could explain why so many insist going gluten-free has helped their health as well as weight.

There’s one other possibilit­y explaining the gluten-free boom, which is more concerning: that thousands of people with coeliac disease don’t know they’ve got it.

Coeliac disease isn’t always easy to spot. Symptoms include bloating, diarrhoea, weight loss and tiredness, which are similar to other conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome. Indeed, they can even be common side- effects of a busy working woman’s lifestyle.

So experts warn that there could be as many as half a million people in the UK with undiagnose­d coeliac disease, which is either symptomfre­e or presents itself with seemingly unrelated symptoms such as headaches or a skin rash.

Dr Green is the first to admit that the food industry’s canny marketing of ‘free-from’ products has stolen a march on the medical community. Gastroente­rologists, he says, are ‘now playing scientific catch-up’.

‘With the advent of the internet, everyone has become a medical researcher,’ he says. ‘This has left room for the public to run away with ideas and point fingers at gluten as the cause for anything and everything. Gluten has become a media-borne epidemic.’

With so much confusion among medical practition­ers, it’s perhaps hardly surprising that so many people take their diet into their own hands and choose to go gluten-free.

So should you give up gluten, in the hope it will make you slimmer, sprightlie­r and happier? Try our simple quiz below . . .

Gluten exposed: the Science Behind the Hype, by Dr Peter Green and Rory Jones (Fourth estate, £14.99). to order a copy for £11.24 (offer valid to August 10, 2016), call 0844 571 0640 or visit mailbooksh­op.co.uk. P&P is free on orders over £15.

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