Migraines More Likely for People With Celiac Disease, Study Says

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I wanted to say thanks for writing and posting the article. I found it to be well written and thought provoking. Thanks again and I will continue to follow your articles to see what else you write in the future.

http://www.felicitysglutenfreehandbook.com

gluten of CT 3:53PM May 22, 2012

I am quite stunned with the phrase that the persons suffering from celiac are more likely to be caught up with migraines too. So, people must be aware up as soon as possible.

http://www.felicitysglutenfreehandbook.com

gluten of DE 9:58AM May 22, 2012

I wanted to say thanks for writing and posting the article. I found it to be well written and thought provoking. Thanks again and I will continue to follow your articles to see what else you write in the future.

http://www.felicitysglutenfreehandbook.com

gluten of DE 10:47PM May 19, 2012

This is really quite interesting because I suffered from debilitating migraines for years. After an anaphylactic response to food, we began testing for allergies. I was diagnosed with Celiac disease, and cleaned my diet of both gluten and casein. I have very few headaches these days.

Monica of MA 12:56PM May 04, 2012

The trouble with this is that celiac screenings don't show non-celiac gluten sensitivity and so you may test negative, but gluten still may be the problem.

Stop eating gluten for a couple of weeks and see how you feel.

Dana of KY 8:05AM May 04, 2012

I protest!

This is just the kind of article that should not be published, because it describes preliminary and unverified data. None of this work has been published, so it's impossible to review the evidence. As usual, the general public risks being confused by the latest "report", and is likely to over-interpret the news, just like the author appears to have done. Part of the job of a journalist is to put these stories into perspective, not just to spin the most exciting possibility.

Adding a disclaimer at the very end saying "The data and conclusions should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal" is just not enough. This should be the first sentence!

A more detailed review of this question can be found at http://bit.ly/IZB0RU

Peter Olins, PhD

Peter Olins of CO 4:57PM May 03, 2012

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