Doctors are slow to do coeliac tests
Doctors are slow to do coeliac tests
The Public are
asking more and more about what tests they need to get to
find out about coeliac disease. New Zealand laboratories
vary in the tests they offer, in the ranges of values for
these tests and their interpretation. The medical
practitioners are confused, so how can the public be
confident in this testing?
Janie’s parents ask, “How come it took ten years for our daughter to get the right diagnosis? Surely, all it takes is a simple blood test to make the diagnosis of coeliac disease. But her doctors never thought to do the test. Why not!”
It took Janie 13 years to be tested for coeliac disease. She had poor growth, chronic diarrhoea and abdominal pain. This had all been put down to stress and her weak constitution. In the end, it turned out that she had coeliac disease which occurs in one in one hundred people (of course it occurs more often in sick people, so the sick people have a much higher rate of this disease – perhaps one in thirty).
Similar stories are heard repeatedly by Doctor Rodney Ford. He says, “Every day in my clinic I see people with symptoms of coeliac disease that have been overlooked by my colleagues. How can this be so when coeliac disease is so common?”
His explanation for this
is that doctors are usually looking for sick people who have
“earned the right” to have a blood test. They are
looking for the classical appearance of coeliac disease (the
thin malnourished person with chronic diarrhoea and a
bloated belly). However, modern research shows that there
is no such “typical” coeliac. Just about anyone can
have it. Most coeliacs do not have much bowel trouble, but
have an assortment of chronic symptoms such as fatigue,
depression and irritable bowel: they feel sick, tired and
grumpy!
There are five common misconceptions that Health Professionals may be making:
1- Seldom blood testing their patients
2- Focus on the mythical classic disease
3- Accepting chronic symptoms as “normal” or untreatable
4- Testing only once, forgetting that coeliac disease is progressive in nature
5- Forgetting to test
immediate family members who are at high risk
Dr Ford urges the medical community to test their patients much more frequently for coeliac disease. He will be speaking at the Gluten Free and Allergy Show 23 and 24 May at the Auckland ASB Showground’s. His topic is “The Gluten Syndrome – the world’s biggest health secret!” He will explain the symptoms, the blood tests, the controversy and the gluten free diet.
The onset of coeliac disease is slow and progressive. Don’t wait to end stage disease before getting tested. You can find out a lot more from his webpage: www.DrRodneyFord.co.nz
ends