Literature DB >> 12488700

The symptomatic and histologic response to a gluten-free diet in patients with borderline enteropathy.

Antonio Tursi1, Giovanni Brandimarte.   

Abstract

GOALS: A clinical problem is posed by patients with symptoms suggestive of gluten sensitivity (diarrhea, weight loss, unresponsive iron-deficiency anemia, etc.); however, small intestinal biopsies reveal only minor abnormalities, such as lymphocytosis with or without crypt hyperplasia (Marsh I-II). Our aim was to assess the benefit of a gluten-free diet (GFD) in patients with these small bowel mucosal abnormalities. STUDY: We studied 35 patients (11 men, 24 women; mean age, 28 years; range, 22-51 years) referred to us for gastrointestinal symptoms or unexplained or unresponsive diseases. Because celiac disease was suspected to be the underlying pathology, small intestinal biopsies were taken. These revealed only minor abnormalities: 11 patients showed Marsh I type lesions, whereas 24 patients demonstrated Marsh II type lesions. Although the histologic lesions were inconsistent for celiac disease and a suspicion of a borderline celiac disease persisted, all patients were motivated to adhere to GFD. RESULTS Only 23 patients adhered to our advice and followed a GFD; follow-up biopsies were taken after 8 to 12 months. In the Marsh I lesion group (seven patients), five patients showed mucosal normalization to Marsh 0 and two showed persistence of Marsh I lesions. In the Marsh II lesion group (16 patients), 9 patients revealed mucosal normalization, 5 improved to a Marsh I lesion, and 3 revealed persistence of Marsh II lesions. A dramatic clinical improvement in symptoms was noted in all patients who were on a GFD, with symptoms virtually disappearing in all patients. Seven patients who refused GFD were reevaluated 8 to 12 months later. Symptoms and histologic lesions were unchanged in six, all of whom refused again to adhere to a GFD. One of the seven with Marsh I lesions had a worsening of symptoms and of histologic lesions (from Marsh I to Marsh IIIa); so, this last patient adhered to a GFD.
CONCLUSIONS: Symptoms disappeared after GFD in patients suspected to have celiac disease but with slight histologic lesions. Although Marsh I-II lesions cannot be classified as celiac lesions (ESPGAN criteria), the patients' symptoms at presentation and the clear improvement of symptoms when on GFD, with or without improvement of histologic lesions, supports the assumption that these patients are sensitive to gluten and may justify treatment with a GFD.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12488700     DOI: 10.1097/00004836-200301000-00006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Gastroenterol        ISSN: 0192-0790            Impact factor:   3.062


  17 in total

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2.  Immunohistochemical CD3 staining detects additional patients with celiac disease.

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4.  Spectrum of gluten-sensitive enteropathy in first-degree relatives of patients with coeliac disease: clinical relevance of lymphocytic enteritis.

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6.  Are rice and spicy diet good for functional gastrointestinal disorders?

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Review 8.  Seronegative celiac disease: where is the specific setting?

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Review 9.  Seronegative Celiac Disease and Immunoglobulin Deficiency: Where to Look in the Submerged Iceberg?

Authors:  Floriana Giorgio; Mariabeatrice Principi; Giuseppe Losurdo; Domenico Piscitelli; Andrea Iannone; Michele Barone; Annacinzia Amoruso; Enzo Ierardi; Alfredo Di Leo
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2015-09-08       Impact factor: 5.717

10.  Symptoms and signs in individuals with serology positive for celiac disease but normal mucosa.

Authors:  Jonas F Ludvigsson; Lena Brandt; Scott M Montgomery
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