El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca

The global prevalence of celiac disease is of one person per 250 inhabitants. The disease is induced by gluten, a peptide contained in wheat, rye and barley that during small intestinal digestion generates smaller peptides. Some of these are resistant to hydrolysis and cross through the epithelium into the mucosa, inducing a cascade of immune reactions leading to the appearance of the disease in susceptible individuals. Gluten appeared as a consequence of agricultural practices initiated 10000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent of southwest Asia. Celiac disease epidemiology is complicated since consumption of gluten differs depending on the origin of populations. Treatment of celiac disease consists of withdrawing gluten from the diet, a task that becomes difficult in the long term. The concept of gluten-free food has changed along time. This article updates the concept of celiac disease, the history of gluten consumption in the world, the characteristics of a gluten free diet and the difficulties to adhere to it.

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Main Authors: PARADA,ALEJANDRA, ARAYA,MAGDALENA
Format: Digital revista
Language:Spanish / Castilian
Published: Sociedad Médica de Santiago 2010
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-98872010001100018
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spelling oai:scielo:S0034-988720100011000182011-01-10El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíacaPARADA,ALEJANDRAARAYA,MAGDALENA Celiac disease Gliadin Glutens The global prevalence of celiac disease is of one person per 250 inhabitants. The disease is induced by gluten, a peptide contained in wheat, rye and barley that during small intestinal digestion generates smaller peptides. Some of these are resistant to hydrolysis and cross through the epithelium into the mucosa, inducing a cascade of immune reactions leading to the appearance of the disease in susceptible individuals. Gluten appeared as a consequence of agricultural practices initiated 10000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent of southwest Asia. Celiac disease epidemiology is complicated since consumption of gluten differs depending on the origin of populations. Treatment of celiac disease consists of withdrawing gluten from the diet, a task that becomes difficult in the long term. The concept of gluten-free food has changed along time. This article updates the concept of celiac disease, the history of gluten consumption in the world, the characteristics of a gluten free diet and the difficulties to adhere to it.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad Médica de SantiagoRevista médica de Chile v.138 n.10 20102010-10-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-98872010001100018es10.4067/S0034-98872010001100018
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-cl
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language Spanish / Castilian
format Digital
author PARADA,ALEJANDRA
ARAYA,MAGDALENA
spellingShingle PARADA,ALEJANDRA
ARAYA,MAGDALENA
El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
author_facet PARADA,ALEJANDRA
ARAYA,MAGDALENA
author_sort PARADA,ALEJANDRA
title El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
title_short El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
title_full El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
title_fullStr El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
title_full_unstemmed El gluten: Su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
title_sort el gluten: su historia y efectos en la enfermedad celíaca
description The global prevalence of celiac disease is of one person per 250 inhabitants. The disease is induced by gluten, a peptide contained in wheat, rye and barley that during small intestinal digestion generates smaller peptides. Some of these are resistant to hydrolysis and cross through the epithelium into the mucosa, inducing a cascade of immune reactions leading to the appearance of the disease in susceptible individuals. Gluten appeared as a consequence of agricultural practices initiated 10000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent of southwest Asia. Celiac disease epidemiology is complicated since consumption of gluten differs depending on the origin of populations. Treatment of celiac disease consists of withdrawing gluten from the diet, a task that becomes difficult in the long term. The concept of gluten-free food has changed along time. This article updates the concept of celiac disease, the history of gluten consumption in the world, the characteristics of a gluten free diet and the difficulties to adhere to it.
publisher Sociedad Médica de Santiago
publishDate 2010
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-98872010001100018
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