A New Model of Celiac Disease: the Gluten Tree, Gluten-Free Diet Not for Celiac Disease Only

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A New Model of Celiac Disease: THE GLUTEN TREE, Gluten-free Diet NOT for Celiac Disease Only

1888 PressRelease - Press release announcing a new model of celiac disease symbolized as The Gluten Tree published on www.CeliacDiseaseExposed.com. A new perspective follows from observing that gluten's (hidden) effect involves the whole body from the beginning. Celiac disease is considered as only part of a larger gluten-triggered process. The Gluten Tree charts the proven gluten connections in a visual perspective.

An outsider's look inside celiac disease leads to a new model symbolized as The Gluten Tree published by Cotter-Lyons Publications onhttp://www.CeliacDiseaseExposed.com. The Gluten Tree is founded on existing peer-reviewed research but with a unique key twist, by Nancy J. Lyons, Ph.D. (physical chemistry) for the general audience.

A gluten-free diet is fundamentally one without wheat, rye or barley. Celiac disease is a gluten-triggered condition of the small intestine--by definition. On August 2, 2013, the FDA announced the first gluten-free food labeling standard. As the media outlets reported this long-awaited guideline, the public was also informed that the gluten-free diet has no proven benefit beyond treating celiac disease. Science suggests otherwise.

The scope of gluten's effect is unbounded but largely hidden and celiac disease represents only one part of the anomaly. The gluten-free diet has resolved cases of multiple ailments such as schizophrenia and Advanced Autoimmune Liver Disease. A gluten-free diet on estimation can prevent up to 40% of ataxia cases unknown in origin: Ataxia is a balance and gait impairment stemming from the cerebellum part of the brain. A gluten-free diet has been an effective treatment for a blistering skin condition called dermatitis herpetiformis. The gluten-free diet has resolved cases of childhood alopecia areata, a balding condition.

The Gluten Tree charts the proven gluten connections in a simple yet...