Conscious Eating
Conscious Eating
Gluten Sensitivity And The Gut-Brain Axis
Recent research is reshaping how scientists understand non-celiac gluten sensitivity. A major scientific review from the University of Melbourne reveals that in gluten sensitivity, which affects around 10 percent of people worldwide, gluten itself is rarely the true culprit. Instead, researchers say non-celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS) is better understood as part of how the gut and brain interact.
The review, published in The Lancet, examined the full body of evidence on NCGS, a condition in which people experience symptoms such as bloating, abdominal pain, brain fog, or fatigue after eating gluten-containing foods, despite testing negative for celiac disease and wheat allergy. According to the scientists who conducted the analysis, this condition is common yet widely misunderstood.
After reviewing tightly controlled clinical trials, the researchers found that only a small number showed clear symptoms caused specifically by gluten. In most studies, people who believed they were gluten-sensitive reacted similarly whether they consumed gluten, wheat, or a placebo. This suggests that expectations, prior experiences with food, and how people interpret gut sensations play a powerful role in triggering symptoms.
The research team explains that symptoms are more often driven by fermentable carbohydrates found in wheat (known as FODMAPs) or by other components of wheat rather than gluten itself. These carbohydrates are already known to provoke symptoms in people with conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). As a result, scientists argue that NCGS fits more closely within the spectrum of gut–brain interaction disorders than as a standalone gluten-related disease.
This reframing has important implications. Millions of people currently avoid gluten, often through highly restrictive diets, believing it is harmful to their health. While their symptoms are very real and should not be negated, the evidence suggests that eliminating gluten may not be necessary—or helpful—for most people. Clinicians involved in the review emphasize that mislabeling the problem as “gluten sensitivity” can lead to missed diagnoses, unnecessary food restriction and nutritional imbalance.
Experts say this updated understanding can help healthcare providers offer more accurate diagnoses and more personalized care. Rather than focusing solely on gluten avoidance, effective treatment may involve targeted dietary adjustments, attention to stress and mental health, and support for the gut–brain connection, all while ensuring adequate nutrition.
The researchers also call for changes beyond the clinic. They argue that public health messaging should move away from portraying gluten as inherently harmful, and that better diagnostic tools, clearer clinical guidelines, and improved public education are urgently needed. As the gluten-free market continues to grow, they caution that commercial and media narratives should not outpace the science.
Overall, this research challenges long-held assumptions and suggests that what many people call gluten sensitivity is less about gluten itself and more about the complex relationship between the gut, the brain and how we experience food.
REFERENCES
Non-coeliac gluten sensitivity. Biesiekierski, Jessica R et al. The Lancet, Volume 406, Issue 10518, 2494 - 2508.
University of Melbourne. (2025, October 23). Gluten sensitivity: It’s not actually about gluten. University of Melbourne Newsroom. https://www.unimelb.edu.au/newsroom/news/2025/october/gluten-sensitivity-its-not-actually-about-gluten

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