| Literature DB >> 16722573 |
Wolfgang Holtmeier1, Wolfgang F Caspary.
Abstract
Celiac disease is a chronic intestinal disease caused by intolerance to gluten. It is characterized by immune-mediated enteropathy, associated with maldigestion and malabsorption of most nutrients and vitamins. In predisposed individuals, the ingestion of gluten-containing food such as wheat and rye induces a flat jejunal mucosa with infiltration of lymphocytes. The main symptoms are: stomach pain, gas, and bloating, diarrhea, weight loss, anemia, edema, bone or joint pain. Prevalence for clinically overt celiac disease varies from 1:270 in Finland to 1:5000 in North America. Since celiac disease can be asymptomatic, most subjects are not diagnosed or they can present with atypical symptoms. Furthermore, severe inflammation of the small bowel can be present without any gastrointestinal symptoms. The diagnosis should be made early since celiac disease causes growth retardation in untreated children and atypical symptoms like infertility or neurological symptoms. Diagnosis requires endoscopy with jejunal biopsy. In addition, tissue-transglutaminase antibodies are important to confirm the diagnosis since there are other diseases which can mimic celiac disease. The exact cause of celiac disease is unknown but is thought to be primarily immune mediated (tissue-transglutaminase autoantigen); often the disease is inherited. Management consists in life long withdrawal of dietary gluten, which leads to significant clinical and histological improvement. However, complete normalization of histology can take years.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16722573 PMCID: PMC1435993 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-1-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Definition of different states of celiac disease.
| Clinically overt CD | Typical gastrointestinal symptoms and signs of malabsorption. Histological changes with villous atrophy and hypertrophic crypts (Marsh type-3 lesion, see table 2). |
| Symptomatic (active) CD | Same findings as in clinically overt CD |
| Silent CD | Asymptomatic patients with typical histological changes (Marsh type-3) |
| Asymptomatic CD | Same findings as in silent CD |
| Atypical CD | Extraintestinal findings such as IgA-nephropathy and neurological symptoms. Typical histological changes. |
| Latent CD/potential CD | Subjects with genetic predisposition who have initially a normal histology with no atrophy or crypt hyperplasia. Immunological abnormalities such as increased count of IELs (particularly gamma-delta T cells, Marsh type-1) and positive EMA or tTG-antibody tests are sometimes present. These subjects may develop clinically overt CD later in life. |
| Refractory CD | Patients who do not respond to a gluten-free diet or who previously responded but later become non-responsive to a gluten-free diet. Intestinal lymphoma may have developed. Inadvertent gluten ingestion and other diseases must be excluded (see differential diagnosis). |
The modified Marsh classification [42].
| IEL | <40 | >40 | >40 | >40 | >40 | >40 |
| Crypts | Normal | Normal | Hypertrophic | Hypertrophic | Hypertrophic | Hypertrophic |
| Villi | Normal | Normal | Normal | Mild atrophy | Marked atrophy | Absent |
* Numbers are given as intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL)/100 epithelial cells