The Creator of the Intestinal Biopsy Disagrees with Most Gastroenterologists
Imagine
being the ‘father’ of the intestinal biopsy and having your opinion ignored. It
would be rather frustrating, not to mention heartbreaking, when your entire
life’s work was dedicated to helping individuals with celiac disease and gluten sensitivity.
A recent
interview with Dr Michael Marsh, the founder of the Marsh Classification System
of intestinal biopsy, revealed that Dr Marsh himself is in total disagreement
with the standard utilized by gastroenterologists to determine whether a
patient should be diagnosed with celiac disease and begin a gluten-free diet.
Is 'Waiting for' Complete Villous Atrophy Malpractice?
In a
fascinating discussion led by Dr Thom O’Bryan from the Gluten eSummit, Dr Marsh
revealed that he created his classification system in 1982 and in 1992 formally
spoke out at an international conference, making it quite clear that to not
recommend a gluten-free diet for a patient with positive blood work but a
negative biopsy was a medico-legal situation in the making. Meaning that doctor
who refused to recommend a gluten-free diet could be held accountable should
that patient later develop severe nutritional deficiencies, osteoporosis or
cancer, to name a few of the many possible negative scenarios.
Dr Marsh
stated that he had met individuals in their 20s who were celiac but hadn’t
initiated a gluten-free diet and already, at their young age, had developed
cancer.
He went on
to cite the work of several other researchers:
- Dr Kaukinen from Finland who found antibodies (immune system reactions) to gluten a full 7 years before villous atrophy occurred.
- Dr Not who showed elevated fatty acid binding protein, substances that reveal cell death, when a biopsy was completely normal.
- Dr Ludvigsson who discovered increased mortality with those showing intestinal inflammation despite no change in the intestinal lining, a mortality rate that exceeded those WITH intestinal damage by 2x.
All these researchers have proven what traditional, current gastroenterologists seem to refuse to admit and that is that waiting for complete destruction of the lining of the small intestine is dangerous and even reckless for the patient.
Show THIS to Your Doctor
Have YOU
been told that you don’t have to stop eating gluten even though a blood test
said otherwise because your biopsy was normal or not a Marsh 3 (meaning total
villous atrophy)? If so, you were told wrong. And that is straight from the
founder of the system himself!
Dr Marsh
feels that all stages found in a biopsy should be taken seriously. And, the
type of biopsy he recommends might interest you, especially if you’ve ever had
one. He prefers rectal biopsies that require little to no
‘down’ time from work or daily activities.
When asked
what percentage of the population fell into the ‘at risk’ stages of Marsh 1, 2
or 3, Dr Marsh stated a full 30%! 1% have Marsh 3, full villous atrophy, but
29%, in his opinion, fall within Marsh 1 or 2 meaning partial atrophy and
therefore needful of a gluten-free diet. That's 30% of our population, a number I've been quoting for a long time...
The doctor
also placed strong emphasis on noting that celiac disease and gluten
sensitivity are not solely the domain of the small intestine, but in fact are
also large intestinal diseases. This was great to hear from such an esteemed
source, because I often am faulted when I mention that we have excellent success
treating Crohn’s disease or colitis by, in great part, removing gluten from the
patient’s diet. I’ve been chastised that such a treatment makes no sense when
gluten doesn’t affect the large intestine, but only the small intestine. Not
being a researcher, all I could fall back on was my own and fellow doctors’
experience here at HealthNOW - we DO see excellent results. It’s nice to
have Dr Michael Marsh’s support in the area. He made it quite clear that gluten
affects the mesenteric immune system and that is found in the intestines – both
large and small.
Is Beer Okay? Really?
Does
gluten-free mean no beer? You’re thinking ‘of course’. Me too. However Dr Marsh
has always allowed his celiac patients to drink English beer. Despite being
warm in temperature, is English beer any different than American beer? I truly
have no idea, but Dr Marsh was quite adamant about the fact that he never saw
any negative reactions in his beer drinking celiac patients. Please don’t ask
me for my opinion on this one yet – I’m going to have to do some pondering!
Celiac Blood Test Found Not to be Accurate
Lastly, Dr
Marsh spoke out strongly against the tTG blood test – another ‘gold standard’
of celiac testing. While the test is 97 to 99% sensitive and specific within a
patient who has a positive Marsh 3 biopsy, when it comes to those with partial
atrophy, the test quickly gets a failing grade at only 27 to 33% accurate.
This is why
I utilize the Cyrex Lab – I have no personal affiliation with this lab, I only
recommend it because it’s the most comprehensive testing currently available.
Help Me to Help More People- Spread the Word!
The bottom
line is that celiac disease and gluten sensitivity are killing people – not the
people who know and diligently follow their diet, but the people who don’t know
or the people who suspect but are erroneously being told by their doctor that
they’re ‘fine’ when they are not.
Let’s spread
the word! Show this post to your doctor. We’ll start a dialogue and perhaps
make some inroads into the proper and early diagnosis of these important
conditions.
Need Help? We're Here for You!
If you felt as if I was describing you above, you are not alone. As I mentioned earlier, adrenal fatigue/exhaustion is almost epidemic. If you would like assistance and don’t have a clinician whom you feel can assist you, consider contacting us for a FREE Health Analysis.
Visit us at www.RootCauseMedicalClinic.com. If you have questions or need any help, I’m here for you! Call 408-733-0400.
I look forward to hearing from you.
To your good health,
Dr Vikki Petersen, DC, CCN, CFMP
IFM Certified Practitioner
Founder of Root Cause Medical Clinic
Co-author of “The Gluten Effect”
Author of the eBook: “Gluten Intolerance – What You Don’t Know May Be Killing You!”
Founder of Root Cause Medical Clinic
Co-author of “The Gluten Effect”
Author of the eBook: “Gluten Intolerance – What You Don’t Know May Be Killing You!”
2 comments:
has anyone ever been diagnosed by rectal gluten challenge/biopsy? seems like its only ever mentioned in medical studies and not available as an alternative to the public
@anonymous - I haven't seen much on rectal biopsies. Rectal challenges are performed in research but biopsies are typically performed from top-down considering the damage to the villi is predominantly in the small intestine.
Best,
Dr Vikki
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