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  A condition called cerebellar ataxia is one manifestation of wheat’s effect on the human brain. This illness usually affects adults, average age of onset 48 years, though children can be affected, too. Symptoms consist of incoordination, falling, and incontinence. The typical situation involves a man or woman in their late 40s or early 50s who begins to experience difficulty walking a straight line, or feels like they are drifting to one side as they walk. Frequent stumbling when there is no obstacle in the way is common. This is due to degeneration of the cerebellum (visible on an MRI or CT scan of the brain), the part of the brain responsible for coordination and other basic nervous system functions. Eventually, nervous system degeneration leads to impaired control over bladder and bowel function and the sufferer begins to wet him- or herself, i.e., urinary incontinence, and eventually develop bowel incontinence. The sufferer also loses the capacity to walk safely and is confined to a walker, then a wheelchair, typically requiring institutionalization to have others manage day-to-day bodily functions. This is a recently appreciated phenomenon with much of the work originating from Sheffield, England, the Mayo Clinic in the US, and China. See here, for instance. There’s more to the effect of wheat on the human brain. Other phenomena include: Migraine headaches Seizures–-especially temporal-lobe seizures Myelitis–inflammation of the lining of the spinal cord P...
Source: Wheat Belly Blog - Category: Cardiology Authors: Tags: Wheat Belly Lifestyle ataxia autoimmune brain cerebellar gluten grains incoordination neuropathy stumbling Source Type: blogs