Celiac disease can be FIXED
Celiac doesn't happen without Vitamin A present; toxicity triggers celiac; bile changes are present in those with celiac
First 30 min of the livestream is testimonials of celiacs who are back to health and most of whom can now tolerate wheat.
All papers referenced in the livestream are provided by Dr. Smith here.
Notes:
Celiac disease is a liver and toxic bile disease.
Vitamin A synergizes with IL-15 to break down gluten tolerance and create enteropathy (gut damage). The researchers could not create the inflammatory celiac cell model until they added retinoic acid.
Glyphosate inhibits the detox of Vitamin A as well as chelates important minerals that your body needs (it causes both a toxicity and a deficiency).
Toxic exposure triggers celiac disease.
Gluten sensitive people dump more bile when they eat gluten.
Those with digestive disorders (ulcerative colitics, Chron’s disease, diarrhea, etc.) had increased fecal bile acid excretion. This bile acid excretion is highly corrosive and causes leaky gut, celiac, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, etc. Also causes gallbladder and small intestinal motor functions to be impaired.
Nine metabolic pathways were significantly disrupted/affected in patients with celiac, one of which is primary bile acid biosynthesis.
In a study of celiac children who didn’t yet have full intestinal villi damage, concentration of bile acid in the blood was significantly higher than in controls.
Intrahepatic cholestasis: The bile isn’t going where it is meant to go (it’s meant to go in the common bile duct and the gallbladder). Instead, it is leaking right out of the liver into the bloodstream.
Celiacs often present with various ailments that are related to bile dysmotility – gallbladder issues, gallstones, slow small intestine motility, etc.
Oats are helpful against celiac disease because it attenuates insulin responses, transports bile acids towards the lower parts of the intestinal tract, and high excretion of bile acids (which lowers serum cholesterol levels).
Bifidobacteria inhibit the inflammatory response induced by gliadins (gluten).
Intestinal permeability may be one of the mechanisms of liver damage, which is present in many celiac patient studies.
Chronic hepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis, and cirrhosis were more prevalent among those who have intestinal disorders.
Other random stuff:
Pilaris keratosis is vitamin A toxicity coming out in the skin.
Autoimmune thyroid is considered a sister disease to celiac.
Women pass along their toxicities to their children (pre-natal).