Unexpectedly it turns out that wheat has compounds that also can affect brain function negatively. Again these effects are subtle and likely only become problematic in some heavy consumers.
The take home remains the same though and that is to work at removing
wheat from your diet. You will still be exposed from time to time
but that works well enough.
Wheat deserves an occasional place at the dinner table but not
continously as it is so easy to slide into.
Wheat Madness –
Is This Popular Grain Provoking Mental Illness?
September
12, 2013 |
Carolanne
Wright,
A
mainstay in most Western diets, wheat is normally not associated with
mental illness. Yet research has shown an intolerance to compounds
within the grain can cause major neurological issues, including
psychotic breakdowns. Far from a benign food, wheat has been linked
with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and even diseases like multiple
sclerosis along with Alzheimer’s. In the spirit of physical and
mental health, many are realizing wheat is not a food to be consumed
lightly.
Dangerous triggers lurking
One
of the main health-harming culprits is found with wheat germ
agglutinin (WGA), a category of lectins. Regardless if the wheat is
soaked, sprouted or cooked, these compounds remain intact. Tiny and
hard to digest,
lectins can accumulate within the body and wreak havoc on physical
and mental well-being. WGA is neurotoxic, crossing the blood brain
barrier and attaching to the myelin sheath, consequentially
inhibiting nerve growth – a serious consideration for those
suffering from degenerative neurological diseases such as multiple
sclerosis and Alzheimer’s. Lectins
also
destroy
the villi in the intestinal tract, creating an inflamed, leaky gut.
Since there is a strong connection between the gut and brain via the
vagus nerve, intestinal ill-health strongly affects the mind, mood
and behavior.
The gut is also considered a ‘second brain’, pumping out its own
source of feel good neurotransmitters like serotonin. If normal
functioning of the intestinal tract is hindered, production of
serotonin dips along with stable mental states.
As
troublesome as lectins are found to be, gliadin in wheat
is
a worse offender for sensitive individuals. As reported by
GreenMedInfo, a study published in the journal Psychiatry Research
makes the connection between gliadin and states of mania:
“The relationship of the antibodies to the clinical course of mania was analyzed by the use of regression models. Individuals with mania had significantly increased levels of IgG antibodies to gliadin, but not other markers of celiac disease, at baseline compared with controls in multivariate analyses … Among the individuals with mania, elevated levels at follow-up were significantly associated with re-hospitalization in the six month follow-up period.”
Likewise,
a study at John Hopkins School of Medicinein Maryland had similar
findings:
“Individuals with recent-onset psychosis and with multi-episode schizophrenia who have increased antibodies to gliadin may share some immunologic features of celiac disease, but their immune response to gliadin differs from that of celiac disease.”
And
let’s not forget about gluten, the poster child for celiac disease
– and now increasingly, for neurological
disorders.
Sayer Ji of GreenMedInfo believes the ramifications of gluten far
surpass the celiac, autistic or schizophrenic individual:
“In the same way that the celiac iceberg illustrated the illusion that intolerance to wheat is rare, it is possible, even probable, that wheat exerts pharmacological influences on everyone. What distinguishes the schizophrenic or autistic individual from the functional wheat consumer is the degree to which they are affected.”
Even
when not suffering from overt mental illness or gluten
intolerance,
it would be wise to pause and consider the unseen
consequences of consuming wheat.
And decide if it’s worth the possible risk to future mental and
physical health.
Sources
for this article include:
About the Author
Carolanne
enthusiastically believes if we want to see change in the world, we
need to be the change. As a nutritionist, natural foods chef and
wellness coach, Carolanne has encouraged others to embrace a healthy
lifestyle of organic living, gratefulness and joyful orientation for
over 13 years. Through her website www.Thrive-Living.net she
looks forward to connecting with other like-minded people who share a
similar vision.
Find
at Diaspora: thriveliving@joindiaspora.com
Follow
on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Thrive_Living
At
Facebook, connect
here: www.facebook.com/pages/Thrive-Living/499578863433146
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Pinterest fans: www.pinterest.com/thriveliving/natural-news/
This
article is offered under Creative Commons license. It’s okay to
republish it anywhere as long as attribution bio is included and all
links remain intact.
ReplyDeleteTHIS wheat is not the same, that our grandparents were living on in Europe and elsewhere. In the 1970-es the traditional wheta has been replaced with a hardes, less nutritious kind. Following that in the 90-wa they all went GMO. All flours in US are GMO ezcept (maybe) the organiz ones, but even organic causes stomach problems for some.