by Sárka-Jonae Miller
(The Best Years in Life) Eating foods containing gluten could lead to rheumatoid arthritis, a disease characterized by inflammation and pain in the joints. Gluten allergies lead to damage in the small intestine when people eat gluten, which is a protein found in most grains. Breads and pasta are just some of the common foods that contain gluten. People who are gluten intolerant or allergic may experience side effects from eating gluten, but some people do not have symptoms and could be unknowingly increasing their risk of rheumatoid arthritis.
Gluten Intolerance and Allergy
Having a gluten intolerance means that the body has a hard time digesting the gluten found in grains like wheat, barley, rye, and possibly oats. If not managed, a gluten intolerance may lead to serious conditions such as diabetes and intestinal cancer.
A gluten intolerance or allergy may cause aching joints, which is also a symptom of rheumatoid arthritis. Additional symptoms include muscle cramps, hair loss, nausea, abdominal pain, loss of appetite, mouth ulcers and seizures.
Rheumatoid Arthritis Symptoms
Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease disease, meaning it causes the body’s immune system to attack healthy tissue. The cause of rheumatoid arthritis is unknown to conventional medical practitioners. Women get RA more often than men and the condition generally presents during middle age.
Symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis include pain and stiffness in the joints on both sides of the body. Most often this affects the fingers, wrists, knees, feet and ankles. Joints may also feel tender or warm during periods of inactivity. Deformity in the joints can occur over time.
Gluten and Autoimmune Response
When bacteria enters the body, the immune system recognizes the invader as something foreign. It attacks this invader to prevent illness. Unfortunately, in people with rheumatoid arthritis, the body thinks that its own tissue is an invader and attacks it. The intestinal lining gets damaged during these attacks, which allows large food particles to pass through the damaged intestinal wall and get into the body. This condition is known as leaky gut and the autoimmune response. It may contribute to rheumatoid arthritis and other autoimmune diseases, according to Robb Wolf. Wolf is a a former research biochemist and the author of the New York Times bestselling book The Paleo Solution.
For someone who is gluten intolerant, the body attacks grains that contain gluten, leading to intestinal damage. This allows the gluten particles to get into the bloodstream and to the joints, which the immune system then attacks and damages as well.
Dietary Therapy as a Treatment for Rheumatoid Arthritis
Dietary therapy may reduce rheumatoid arthritis symptoms by eliminating foods that trigger an autoimmune response, according to an article published in the British Journal of Rheumatotology in June 1993. This therapy may even slow the progression of the disease by eliminating all trigger foods from the diet.
Dietary therapy is also useful as a diagnostic tool to discover unique food triggers. The therapy begins with eliminating every possible food trigger for arthritis out of the diet, such as beef, eggs, wheat, oranges, milk, peanuts, malt and soy. Food is then reintroduced one at a time to see if a person reacts to a particular item.
Sources for this article include:
British Journal of Rheumatotology
RobbWolf.com
PubMed Health: Rheumatoid Arthritis
PubMed Health: Celiac Disease