
Walk down the aisles at any grocery store today and you’ll find bread, crackers, cereals, and pastas proudly stamped “Gluten-Free” — as if gluten were some kind of dietary villain lurking in your morning toast. For the roughly 1% of Americans with celiac disease, avoiding gluten isn’t a lifestyle choice; it’s a medical necessity. But for the much larger slice of the population without any gluten-related disorder, the science tells a more complicated story.
What Is Celiac Disease, and What Causes It?
Celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder — meaning the immune system turns on the body itself. The trigger is gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley, and rye. Gluten fragments interact with an enzyme called tissue transglutaminase in the gut. The immune system mistakes this complex for a threat and attacks it, but in the process, it damages the body’s own intestinal tissue. This is what makes celiac disease an autoimmune condition, rather than a simple food allergy. The immune system mounts an attack, generating antibodies that damage the villi, the tiny finger-like projections lining the small intestine that are responsible for absorbing nutrients. Over time, that damage leads to malabsorption and a cascade of health problems.
The disease has a strong hereditary component — about 7.5% of close relatives of people with celiac disease also have it. Researchers have identified two specific genetic variants, HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8, that are present in virtually all celiac patients. But here’s the catch: about 40% of the general population carry one of these genes, yet most of them never develop celiac disease. That means genes load the gun, but something else pulls the trigger. Environmental factors — gastrointestinal infections, timing of gluten introduction in infancy, and other autoimmune conditions like type 1 diabetes and thyroid disease, surgery, even pregnancy — all appear to play a role. Researchers continue to study why some genetically susceptible individuals develop the disease while others do not.
Symptoms and Diagnosis: A Tricky Puzzle
If you’re picturing someone doubled over with stomach pain after eating a sandwich, that’s one version of celiac disease — but far from the only one. The disease presents in more than 200 documented ways. Classic gut symptoms include abdominal pain, bloating, diarrhea, and foul-smelling stools. But celiac disease can also show up as iron-deficiency anemia, bone loss, infertility, nerve damage, depression, liver enzyme abnormalities, and even a distinctive itchy skin rash called dermatitis herpetiformis. Children may experience stunted growth and delayed puberty. Some people, especially seniors, may have no obvious symptoms at all.
This symptom diversity is part of why diagnosis is so often delayed. Researchers estimate that somewhere between 60–70% of Americans with celiac disease remain undiagnosed.
The path to diagnosis typically starts with a blood test measuring tissue transglutaminase IgA antibodies — a marker the immune system produces in response to gluten. If that test is positive, a gastroenterologist performs an upper endoscopy and takes small tissue samples from the small intestine to look for the telltale villous damage under a microscope. Both tests need to be done while the patient is still eating gluten; going gluten-free first can produce falsely normal results and delay or prevent an accurate diagnosis.
Treatment: One Answer, Lifelong Commitment
There are no medications, no injections, no surgical fixes for celiac disease. The only effective treatment is a strict, lifelong gluten-free diet. And “strict” really does mean strict — even trace amounts of gluten can damage the intestinal lining, sometimes without producing obvious symptoms. Gluten hides in surprising places: commercial soups, sauces, ice cream, hot dogs, medications, dietary supplements, and even some communion wafers. Working with a registered dietitian is strongly recommended.
The good news is that the intestinal lining is remarkably resilient. Once gluten is eliminated, symptoms typically improve within one to two weeks, and mucosal healing generally follows over one to two years. Nutritional deficiencies — commonly iron, folate, calcium, and B vitamins — are addressed with supplements during recovery. A small subset of patients develop “refractory celiac disease,” where the intestine doesn’t heal despite strict dietary adherence; these cases may require corticosteroids and carry a less favorable prognosis.
Prognosis: Life After Diagnosis
Most people with celiac disease who strictly follow a gluten-free diet do very well over the long term. Intestinal architecture normalizes, antibody levels drop, and many of the downstream complications — anemia, bone loss, neurological symptoms — improve or resolve. The earlier the diagnosis is made and the gluten-free diet is initiated, the better the outcome.
One significant concern on the long-term horizon is cancer risk. People with longstanding, untreated celiac disease face a roughly 6–8% elevated risk of lymphoma of the small intestine. There is also a modestly increased risk of other gastrointestinal cancers. The reassuring part: patients who achieve normal intestinal histology on a gluten-free diet appear to have the same lymphoma risk as the general population. Adherence to the diet is, quite literally, protective.
Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitivity: The Gray Zone
Between full-blown celiac disease and perfectly healthy gluten tolerance lies a murkier territory: non-celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS). People with NCGS experience symptoms similar to celiac disease — bloating, abdominal pain, fatigue, headaches, brain fog — after eating gluten, but their blood tests for celiac antibodies are negative and intestinal biopsies show no structural damage. The condition is real and increasingly recognized, but its biology remains incompletely understood.
Non‑celiac gluten sensitivity does not have a single definitive test. Instead, it is a diagnosis of exclusion. Once all other causes have been excluded, NCGS is what’s left.
Milder Forms of Gluten Intolerance
Not everyone with gluten‑related complaints fits neatly into the categories above. Some people never undergo formal testing but notice a pattern: when they eat bread, pasta, or pastries, they just don’t feel good. When they cut back on those foods, they feel lighter and more energetic.
These milder forms of gluten intolerance can be tricky to interpret. The symptoms overlap with irritable bowel syndrome, lactose intolerance, stress‑related gut issues, and reactions to FODMAPs (fermentable carbohydrates) found in wheat and many other foods. In some cases, it may not be gluten itself causing problems but the overall carbohydrate profile of a highly processed, wheat‑heavy diet. Some scientists suggest renaming the condition “non-celiac wheat sensitivity” to better capture this complexity. Still, for the individual, what matters most is whether changing their diet in a structured way leads to sustained relief.
Wheat allergy is a classic IgE‑mediated food allergy to wheat proteins that can cause hives, wheezing, or even anaphylaxis, and needs to be distinguished from celiac disease and NCGS. It is treated like other food allergies and is best managed by an allergist.
The Gluten-Free Craze: Helpful Trend or Expensive Fad?
Here’s where things get interesting — and a little frustrating for nutritional scientists. Surveys suggest that roughly 30% of American adults are actively trying to reduce or eliminate gluten from their diets. A 2013 poll found that 65% of Americans believed gluten-free foods were simply healthier, and 27% thought going gluten-free would help them lose weight. These numbers vastly outpace the actual prevalence of celiac disease and gluten sensitivity combined.
What does the science actually say? For people without celiac disease, NCGS, or a wheat allergy, there’s no compelling evidence that a gluten-free diet improves health, reduces inflammation, boosts athletic performance, or prevents disease. A large 2017 study of over 100,000 participants without celiac disease found no association between long-term gluten consumption and heart disease risk — and in fact suggested that gluten-avoiders who cut back on whole grains might be inadvertently increasing their cardiovascular risk through lower dietary fiber and an increase in refined starches, sugars and fats in gluten substitutes.
There’s also a nutritional downside worth considering. Gluten-free processed foods — the breads, pastas, crackers, and cookies filling grocery shelves — are often lower in fiber, iron, zinc, B vitamins, and folate than their conventional counterparts. They tend to be higher in sugar and fat to compensate for gluten’s structural role. And they’re almost always more expensive.
On the other hand, for some people, adopting a gluten‑free pattern coincides with broader healthy changes—more fruits, vegetables, and home‑cooked meals—so perceived benefits may come from overall diet quality rather than gluten removal itself.
The bottom line from Harvard Medical School is clear: if you feel well and have no digestive symptoms, there’s no evidence that a gluten-free diet will help, and some modest evidence it might hurt.
That said, if you’re experiencing real, persistent gut symptoms and haven’t been evaluated, the right move isn’t to quietly go gluten-free and see if you feel better — it’s to see a doctor and get tested first. Eliminating gluten before testing can produce falsely negative results and close the diagnostic door on a condition that, left untreated, carries genuine long-term risks.
The Takeaway
Celiac disease is a serious autoimmune condition affecting about 1% of the population, with the majority still undiagnosed. It requires strict, permanent gluten avoidance and careful medical follow-up. Non-celiac gluten sensitivity occupies a legitimate but scientifically murkier space, affecting a real but incompletely defined group of people for whom reducing gluten makes practical sense. For everyone else — the majority of gluten-free shoppers — the science doesn’t support the hype. Gluten itself isn’t the villain; it’s just a protein. The real story is in the individual biology of those who can’t tolerate it.
Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT.
Sources:
· WebMD — Celiac Disease: Symptoms, Causes, and Treatment https://www.webmd.com/digestive-disorders/celiac-disease/celiac-disease
· Merck Manual (Consumer Version) — Celiac Disease https://www.merckmanuals.com/home/digestive-disorders/malabsorption/celiac-disease
· Merck Manual (Professional Edition) — Celiac Disease https://www.merckmanuals.com/professional/gastrointestinal-disorders/malabsorption-syndromes/celiac-disease
· American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) — Diagnosis and Management of Celiac Disease: Guidelines From the American College of Gastroenterology (2024) https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2024/0100/practice-guidelines-celiac-disease.html
· Houston Methodist — Celiac Disease: Symptoms, Treatment and What To Know (2024) https://www.houstonmethodist.org/blog/articles/2024/jun/celiac-disease-symptoms-treatment-and-what-to-know/
· PMC / Nutrients Journal — The Gluten-Free Diet for Celiac Disease and Beyond https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8625243/
· PMC / Diabetes Spectrum — The Gluten-Free Diet: Fad or Necessity? https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5439366/
· Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health — Gluten: A Benefit or Harm to the Body? https://nutritionsource.hsph.harvard.edu/gluten/
·Harvard Health — Ditch the Gluten, Improve Your Health? https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/ditch-the-gluten-improve-your-health
Medical Disclaimer
The information provided in this article is intended for general educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Always seek the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read here.
If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately.
The author of this article is a licensed physician, but the views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not represent the official position of any hospital, health system, or medical organization with which the author may be affiliated.













“86” — A Little Number With a Big History
By John Turley
On May 2, 2026
In Commentary
Fifty some years ago when I was in the Marines, we used the term “86” to refer to something that should be ignored or discarded—in the colorful vernacular of the Corps, “shit canned”. That’s trashed to you civilians. The Marines have never been known as a peaceable lot and we had many colorful euphemisms for doing grievous bodily harm, but “86” was never among them.
So why is “86” suddenly everywhere in the news? Blame James Comey. The former FBI Director posted a beach photo on Instagram showing seashells arranged to spell out “86 47” — and the internet promptly exploded. Republicans argued it was a death threat against the 47th president. Comey said it simply meant he wanted Trump removed from office. That dispute has brought a piece of century-old American slang back into the spotlight, so it’s worth taking a look at what the term means and where it came from.
The Short Answer
Eighty-six is slang meaning “to throw out,” “to get rid of,” or “to refuse service to.” It most likely comes from 1930s soda-counter slang meaning that an item was sold out. This was part of a broader diner code that included: 13 “the boss is around,” 81 “glass of water,” and 95 “customer left without paying”. Over the decades it evolved from a kitchen noun into a verb with broader reach, and today it shows up everywhere from restaurant kitchens to Twitter and now worldwide headlines.
The Longer Answer
Here’s the honest answer: nobody knows for certain. Its etymology is unknown, but it seems to have been coined in the 1920s or 1930s. There are many theories about its origin — one article enumerates 18 possibilities, and another suggests there are “about 86 theories about 86.”
While the leading contender is the mundane diner option, there are several other more or less plausible and frequently more colorful options.
The most linguistically grounded explanation is that “86” is simply rhyming slang. The most common theory is that it is rhyming slang for “nix.” That’s the same “nix” meaning to reject or say no.
One of the more colorful stories involves a Prohibition-era speakeasy. Chumley’s, a bar with multiple entrances including one at 86 Bedford Street in New York. The story goes that the bar was supposedly warned by police before raids. Customers were told to “86 it” — meaning leave through the Bedford Street exit while cops came through the other door. It’s a great story, and if it’s not true it should be.
How It Evolved
First appearing in the early 1930s as a noun, it did not take long for the word to broaden its use beyond the realm of the soda counter. In the 1950s the word underwent some functional shift and began to be used as a verb — initially meaning “to refuse to serve a customer,” and later taking on the slightly extended meaning of “to get rid of; to throw out.”
It was quickly adopted and members of the military services who love slang, shortcuts, and inside terminology. It may just be a coincidence that Article 86 of the U.S. Uniform Code of Military Justice concerns Absence Without Leave, or AWOL.
By the 1970s it had moved well beyond the restaurant world. In the 1972 film The Candidate, a media adviser says to Robert Redford’s character, “OK, now, for starters, we got to cut your hair and eighty-six the sideburns.”
Where It Stands Today
These days, people use “86” when they cancel plans, dump something, or boot someone from a chat. Social media picked it up — Twitter and TikTok users will “86 a trend” or “86 a person” in a heartbeat.
In professional kitchens and bars, it remains “everyday lingo” — one hospitality industry veteran called it “probably the most overused word in hospitality.”
The Comey controversy also resurrected an older, arcane, and darker shade of the term. According to Cassell’s Dictionary of Slang, “to 86” can alternatively mean “to kill, to murder; to execute judicially.” That said, Merriam-Webster notes this use is infrequent, and they do not include this sense due to its relative recency and sparseness of use.
The bottom line is that “86” is one of those wonderfully slippery pieces of American slang that started in a noisy kitchen, picked up mythology along the way, and is now flexible enough to mean anything from “we’re out of the salmon” to a loaded political statement — depending entirely on who’s using it and who’s listening.
Or, perhaps this entire tempest is just the response of one thin skinned man to his pathologic fear of seashells.