The current standard for a celiac disease diagnosis is a positive blood test for specific antibodies, followed by a biopsy of the intestine that reveals damage to the villi (villous atrophy). These tests are certainly invasive and unpleasant, but more than that, they are useless in cases where a patient is already following a gluten-free diet. These patients must then undergo a “gluten challenge” of up to eight weeks, during which time they reintroduce gluten-containing foods into their diet, and suffer the consequences. Only then will the blood test and biopsy accurately reveal the hallmarks necessary for an accurate diagnosis.
1/11/2018
New Testing Option for Possible Celiac Disease Sufferers
Recent Posts
- Attention Researchers: CDMRP Funding Opportunities Now Available
- Meet Jennifer, Advocate and CDF Assistant Director of Community Engagement
- Addressing Health Equity and Clinical Disparities – Marilyn’s Message February 2024
- Underrepresented Populations in Celiac Disease, A New Grant, and Collaborations to Improve Health Equity in Celiac Disease
Search the archive
Categories
- Advocacy News
- Celiac Disease in the News
- Clinical Trials
- Eat! Gluten-Free
- Featured
- Foundation Press
- iCureCeliac
- Marilyn’s Message
- Monthly eNewsletter
- Patient Profile Advocacy Series
- Research News
- Research Press
- Trending Topics
Marilyn's Message
2/29/2024
Read moreAddressing Health Equity and Clinical Disparities – Marilyn’s Message February 2024
As we continue our journey toward advancing awareness and understanding of celiac disease, it is crucial that we reflect on health equity and the persistent clinical disparities within our community—so that together we can confront these factors and dismantle barriers hindering access to care and support. Health equity represents the...