For most, gluten can be important part of a healthy diet

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Under the watchful eye of her younger sister, Sydney Steans-Gail (left), Leah Steans-Gail drops spoonfuls of gluten-free chocolate chip muffin mix into a muffin tin held by their mother. (MCT News Service)
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For example, a gluten-free diet emphasizes consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables and discourages eating fried food.

A group of Finnish researchers, including scientists from the University of Helsinki, reported that a gluten-free diet benefited patients with mild forms of gluten intolerance. Benefits included less damage to the small intestine. Patients fed gluten-free diets had less atrophy of villi, the part of the intestine where nutrient absorption occurs. Atrophy of the villi reduces nutrient absorption.

In the digestive tract, gluten is viscous and sticky. Scientists have shown that gluten traps minerals, protein, and other nutrients, inhibiting their absorption and making them unavailable to the animal. Gluten is also likely to inhibit nutrient uptake in humans, too.

The typical American diet contains excess nutrients, though, so nutrient deficiencies due to gluten should not be an issue.

Dr. Mark Haub, a nutritionist at Kansas State University, does not believe the hype about the health benefits of a gluten-free diet for people who do not have celiac disorder.

“People have been eating wheat, rye and barley for thousands of years, and there are people who live to be 100 who eat wheat products and don’t seem to exhibit any types of health issues,” he said.

As for using gluten-free diets to lose weight?

“The gluten-free product likely contains as many calories as gluten options,” Haub said. “A gram of sorghum, corn or rice flour appears to be metabolically similar to a gram of wheat flour.”

What is gluten?

Gluten is a protein that has a physiological function in grain. In a grain kernel, gluten serves as a storage protein; it provides protein to the developing plant embryo during germination. As seed germination progresses, the embryo uses gluten protein to form various plant tissues and structures, such as roots, stems, and leaves as well as hormones and metabolic signals.

Gluten is actually a combination of several proteins. The two present in the greatest concentrations are gliadin and glutelin. In addition to these proteins, the gluten complex also includes more than 50 other proteins – each present in low concentrations.

According to anthropologists, early humans abandoned the growing and eating of barley in favor of growing wheat because they preferred the “stretchy” texture of dough made from wheat. Dough made from wheat was stretchy because it contained a higher gluten content than did barley or rye.

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