Secretory IgA
Cross-source consensus on Secretory IgA from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Other
Highlighted claims
- Secretory IgA is the predominant mucosal immunoglobulin in the gut. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ
- Secretory IgA can bind invading microorganisms and antigenic proteins such as gliadin in the intestinal lumen. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ
- The recommended clinical approach for elevated SIgA is to identify and address the root cause trigger. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ
- Elevated secretory IgA can be caused by acute infections, acute stress, food sensitivities, environmental insults, celiac disease, or colon cancer. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ
- Common causes of low secretory IgA include decreased commensal bacteria, chronic infections, chronic stress, and chronically decreased gut barrier function. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ
- Low secretory IgA tends to reflect chronic rather than acute conditions. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ
- Food antigen tolerance depends partly on epithelial and immune cell maturation that is largely determined by commensal microbiota. — GI Map Interpretation: Fundamentals and Clinical FAQ