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New low-gluten host safe for celiac disease sufferers

By Christopher Gaul

Senior staff correspondent

The University of Maryland researcher whose ground-breaking study revealed that celiac disease is dramatically more prevalent in the United States than previously thought said he is sure a newly developed, low-gluten eucharistic host is safe for the vast majority of sufferers of the little- known digestive disorder.

“This is really wonderful news and is going to make a big difference in the lives of what we now know to be the many people in this country who have celiac,” said Dr. Alessio Fasano, whose 2003 research discovered that more than two million Americans suffer from celiac.

Prior to the publication of the University of Maryland Center for Celiac Research study, the disease was thought to be rare. But now it is clear that it’s twice as common as Crohn’s ulcerative colitis and cystic fibrosis, said the professor of pediatrics, medicine and physiology who is a parishioner of St. Paul in Ellicott City.

“If there are about 300 people in church for Mass on Sunday, then we now know that two or three of them at least are likely to have celiac,” said Dr. Fasano, who noted that the disease affects about one in 130 Americans.

Celiac disease is a digestive disorder that is triggered by the protein gluten, which is found in wheat, barley and other grains. The Vatican requires that hosts must contain some gluten, an ingredient essential in the making of actual bread, but no one in the U.S. had developed a host with a low enough quantity of gluten that celiac sufferers could tolerate without harm.

That was until last month when, in a monastery in the rolling hills of northwest Missouri, members of the Congregation of the Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration produced a wheat host that contained a mere 0.01 percent of gluten, a level low enough to be perfectly safe for celiac sufferers, Dr. Fasano said.

“We had been trying to develop a really, really low-gluten bread for the past 10 or more years,” said Sister Rita Dohn, O.S.B., who heads the Benedictine Sisters’ altar bread department. “After all these years of trial and error we finally did it and we’re so thrilled for people with celiac who can now receive the host.”

Sister Rita said the challenge she and her fellow Sisters faced was trying to keep just enough gluten in the bread to meet the requirements set by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, yet an amount small enough to pose no threat to celiac sufferers, as determined by medical experts.

The level achieved by the Benedictines was even lower than that of a low-gluten host developed in Italy recently and approved by the Vatican and the scientific committee of the Italian Celiac Association.

According to the U.S. bishops’ Committee on the Liturgy, the Benedictine Sisters’ bread contains unleavened wheat and water, is free of additives and conforms to the requirements of the Code of Canon Law, canon 924.2.

“This low-gluten content is still enough gluten to confect bread for the Eucharist,” the committee determined. “(It) is the only true, low-gluten altar bread known to the Secretariat and approved for use at Mass in the United States.”

However, committee officials cautioned that while gluten-intolerant persons may be able to consume the low-gluten host, or some portion of it, they are “strongly advised” to check with their personal physicians first. Prior to the development of the low-gluten host, U.S. bishops had advised celiac sufferers to receive Communion only in the form of consecrated wine.

The celiac issue was thrown into the public spotlight in the U.S. in 2001 when the parents of a five-year-old Boston girl with celiac disease left the Catholic Church after their pastor would not allow them to substitute the wheat host with a rice wafer for her first Communion.

Until the results of Dr. Fasano’s study were made known last year, doctors rarely diagnosed celiac disease in their patients who suffered from symptoms of gastrointestinal discomfort or distress.

“I look back and I think, how many patients over the years have I missed who had celiac disease whom we said had IBS (irritable bowel syndrome)? Hundreds, hundreds,” said Mercy Medical Center’s Dr. Michael Cox, a gerontologist for the past 25 years.

He said that of the patients who now return to him with symptoms of IBS, five to 10 percent are testing positive for celiac.

“I’m diagnosing more and more people with celiac now,” Dr. Cox said. “It’s out there in unprecedented numbers. I’ve diagnosed more patients with celiac in the past year than in all my 25 years of practice.”

Catholic Review.

219 posted on 08/12/2004 2:28:41 PM PDT by sinkspur ("Who is the father of the Sons of Zebedee"?--Cardinal Fanfani)
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To: sinkspur

Regarding the low-gluten hosts of the Benedictine Sisters.

As a traditional Catholic who suffers from Celiac Disease, I was happy to learn of these low gluten hosts had been approved by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.

But all is not as it seems in this case. The sisters had actually found a way to get around the ruling from the Vatican and from canon law on the subject. They found a way to confect "bread" (their hosts actually look more like a brown corn flake) without a gluten component in their mix. They had their hosts (which they had made by mixing two different types of wheat starch - from which all or nearly all the gluten had been removed) tested for gluten using the "Elisa Test". The lowest amount this test can detect is .01%. No gluten was detected at all so .01% is what they said it contained. It really only contains imperceivable traces of gluten which happily makes them safe for celiacs, but it skirts the requirement that the wheat not be modified in such a way that bread cannot be made from it. They have managed to make a wheat starch flake that sticks together well enough to be used for a communion wafer. The bishops have approved it but there are so many other sacrileges they have approved of that this is meaningless.

I ordered some of these "altar breads" myself and gave them along with what information I had about them to the pastor of my SSPX chapel seeking his approval for their use in my case. He submitted the information to Bp. Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, the canonist for the Society. The bishop's ruling was that they are not valid matter for the Eucharist. Below is his letter stating his reasoning on this.

Celiacs can receive the Eucharist under the species of wine - the Precious Blood - at SSPX chapels with prior approval but after the manner of the Eastern rites from a special spoon not from the Chalice. This is so that the consecrated vessels are touched only by the priest, which is the traditional practice.

I have yet to receive Holy Communion in this way but only because of foot-dragging on the part of my pastor and my passive stance with him. I have received a small partical of the Host once a year, usually with a violent reaction as the result. But I am used to occasional reactions of this sort. They are hard to avoid in a wheaty world.

I have kept my Easter obligation though technically I could be dispensed from it. Our Lord suffered to be able to give Himself to us. I figure I can suffer to receive Him at least once a year.

I was hoping for approval of these low-gluten hosts but I am satisfied with the bishop's answer. If I were willing to make do with questionable validity I would still be in the novus ordo. Deo gratias, I am not.

JMJ --- Roger


Mgr. Bernard Tissier de Mallerais
Séminaire Saint Pie X
Ecône
CH-1908 Ridoles
[Switzerland]

To Reverend Father ****

Ecône, July 23rd, 2004

Dear Reverend Father,

Having read the documentation that you sent me about these "low rate gluten hosts" of the Benedictine Sisters Altar Bread Department, and having taken Father Denis Puga’s advice, I conclude that these hosts are invalid matter of the sacrament of Eucharist.

In fact the whole gluten has been removed from the flour and the "low rate" is under the noticeable rate of .01%: that is to say only imperceivable traces of gluten remain: quasi nothing.

But in normal flour, the rate of gluten is between 8% and 10%, and we know that gluten is, as well as amidon [wheat starch], an essential component of wheat flour.

The suppression of this essential component has, as a consequence, that the flour is not at all able to make the "mere triticeus" bread (can. 815) that is able to be the valid matter of the holy Eucharist.

The Benedictine Sisters confess that the absence of gluten made them problems to make the breads (hosts), because of the lack of elasticity of the dough: their new dough is therefore not the natural one. This argument completes the first.

Eventually we must be tutiorists in the matter of validity of the sacraments. [Tutiorists say that from the natural law "comes a certain law that we must always follow the safer opinion"].

+ Bernard Tissier de Mallerais

---Note: Text in [ ]'s are my additions.


500 posted on 08/14/2004 11:46:35 PM PDT by quidestveritas
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