Anti-gliadin Antibodies and The Gluten-free Diet
Days on GF diet | AGA | |
0 | 203 | |
7 (1 wk) | 195 | |
30 (1 mo.) | 171 | |
61 (2 mo.) | 144 | |
91 (3 mo) | 121 | |
122 (4 mo) | 101 | |
183 (6 mo) | 72 | |
274 (9 mo) | 44 | |
365 (1 yr) | 27 | |
548 (18 mo) | 11 | |
730 (2 yr) | 6 | |
AGA values below 10 (black) are normal |
What is the relationship of gluten and anti-gliadin antibodies?. In gluten-sensitive individuals AGA testing is a routinely used blood test for possible presence of coeliac disease, allergies or idiopathic phenomena. The measurement of AGA is done with ELISA or radioimmunoassay. Such tests measure the level of AGA relative to a standard, such as a level of 10 = point which 85% of normal population falls below. Greater than 10 equals disease and a value of 3 is expected (mean).
Individuals who have coeliac disease may have values in excess of 200. There is the common expectation that removal of gluten results in the loss of AGA; however, since gluten is the target of the antibodies, that which would deplete them from the body, removal of gluten results in the benign circulation of antibodies. The half life of these antibodies is typically 120 days. Given an expected normal of 3 and assuming that the individual starts with a score of 203, we can predict the levels of AGA at various future time points. Based on these initial numbers, patients with very high AGA values may take 2 years to return to the normal range.
Refractory coeliac disease (RCD). RCD or non-strict gluten-free diet are two causes of failure of AGA to return to normality on the GF diet. In the first instance lymphocytes may remain stimulated even though the antigen that originally stimulated them was removed from the diet.
Read more about this topic: Anti-gliadin Antibodies
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