Site Home Page Discussion Forum Search Links to Other Celiac Related Sites About the sensible celiac Books about Celiac Disease Videos about Celiac Disease Latest Celiac News Shop for Gluten Free / Celiac Items Sensible Celiac RSS Feed Selection Page
Gluten Free Recipes hundreds and hundreds of free recipes Gluten Free Snacks at the Sensible Celiac Gluten-Free Pantry a leading maker of GF foods Gluten Free Licorice delicious and gluten free
the sensible celiac
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
January 07, 2009, 08:04:09 AM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:     Advanced search
There may be as many as 3 million people in the United States with active cases of celiac disease who are undiagnosed.
3980 Posts in 2939 Topics by 387 Members
Latest Member: victorsilva
* Home Help Search Login Register
+  the sensible celiac
|-+  Welcome to The Sensible Celiac
| |-+  Celiac Disease in the News
| | |-+  [Celiac News] [neurological and psychiatric aspects of some gastrointestinal diseases.]
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »
Pages: [1] Go Down Print
Author Topic: [Celiac News] [neurological and psychiatric aspects of some gastrointestinal diseases.]  (Read 164 times)
News Bot
Sr. Member
****

Karma: 0
Offline Offline

Posts: 409



View Profile WWW
« on: October 29, 2008, 04:23:39 PM »

[neurological and psychiatric aspects of some gastrointestinal diseases.]
           


[Neurological and psychiatric aspects of some gastrointestinal diseases.]
    Orv Hetil. 2008 Nov 2;149(44):2079-86
    Authors: Aszalós Z
    The gastrointestinal tract is controlled by the independent enteric nervous system. It is also closely connected to the central nervous system, and bi-directional communication exists between them. The communication involves neural pathways as well as immune and endocrine mechanisms. The brain-gut axis plays a prominent role in the modulation of gut functions. Signals from different sources (e.g. sound, sight, smell, somatic and visceral sensations, pain) reach the brain. These inputs are modified by memory, cognition and affective mechanisms and integrated within the neural circuits of the central nervous system, spinal cord, autonomic and ent... MedWorm Sponsored Message: Get support for celiac disease, gluten free recipes, and moderated discussions by
joining the active community at The Sensible Celiac.
           

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?tmpl=NoSidebarfile&db=PubMed&cmd=Retrieve&list_uids=18952527&dopt=Abstract
           
Logged
the sensible celiac
Administrator
Sr. Member
*****

Karma: 16
Offline Offline

Posts: 499



View Profile WWW
« Reply #1 on: October 29, 2008, 05:13:44 PM »

From the article, discussing the social and psychiatric characteristics of men with Celiac Disease:

Quote
Exaggerated conscientiousness, perfectionism, oversensitivity, feeling of deficiency in effectiveness, and higher demand for social parity, neuroticism and alexithymia have been detected among their constant personality features.


Alexithymia is apparently the inabilitty to express feelings using words, anyone who knows me would dispute that I have this issue, but much of the rest of this does seem to describe me very well.












;
Logged

Pages: [1] Go Up Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  


Glutino Gluten Free Crackers new products from Glutino Gluten Free Recipes for Kids listing of GF cookbooks 4 kids Gluten Free Cookbooks get ideas for GF meals here Tinkyada Gluten Free Pasta yes you can have GF pasta
Ads By Steve: designed and produced by Steve's Web Hosting. Helping you live a healthy Gluten Free life
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.256 seconds with 19 queries.