| Literature DB >> 22811701 |
B Admou1, L Essaadouni, K Krati, K Zaher, M Sbihi, L Chabaa, B Belaabidia, A Alaoui-Yazidi.
Abstract
The nonclassic clinical presentation of celiac disease (CD) becomes increasingly common in physician's daily practice, which requires an awareness of its many clinical faces with atypical, silent, and latent forms. Besides the common genetic background (HLA DQ2/DQ8) of the disease, other non-HLA genes are now notably reported with a probable association to atypical forms. The availability of high-sensitive and specific serologic tests such as antitissue transglutuminase, antiendomysium, and more recent antideamidated, gliadin peptide antibodies permits to efficiently uncover a large portion of the submerged CD iceberg, including individuals having conditions associated with a high risk of developing CD (type 1 diabetes, autoimmune diseases, Down syndrome, family history of CD, etc.), biologic abnormalities (iron deficiency anemia, abnormal transaminase levels, etc.), and extraintestinal symptoms (short stature, neuropsychiatric disorders, alopecia, dental enamel hypoplasia, recurrent aphtous stomatitis, etc.). Despite the therapeutic alternatives currently in developing, the strict adherence to a GFD remains the only effective and safe therapy for CD.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22811701 PMCID: PMC3395124 DOI: 10.1155/2012/637187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6121 Impact factor: 2.260
Figure 1The celiac iceberg model [14].
Clinical and biological revealing circumstances of atypical CD.
| Atypical clinical symptoms | |
|---|---|
| Anemia | |
| Unclear vomiting | |
| Constipation | |
| Recurrent abdominal pain | |
| Short stature | |
| Irritability and impaired school performance | |
| Impaired physical fitness and chronic fatigue | |
| Osteopenia/osteoporosis/arthtritis | |
| Dermatitis herpetiformis | |
| Dental enamel hypoplasia | |
| Recurrent aphtous stomatitis | |
| Headache | |
| Peripheral neuropathy | |
| White matter lesions | |
| Cerebellar ataxia | |
| Epilepsy | |
| Intracranial calcifications | |
| Autism | |
| Psychiatric disorders | |
| Depression | |
| Pubertal delay | |
| Recurrent abortions | |
| Infertility | |
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| Biologic abnormalities | |
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| Anemia, iron deficiency; vitamin B12 and/or folate deficiency | |
| Hypertransaminasemia | |
| Hyperalkaline phosphatase level | |
| Hyperalbuminemia | |
| Hypercalcaemia, hypophosphatemia | |
| Thrombocytosis, leukocytosis | |
| Coagulopathy | |
| Low high-density and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels | |
List of possible celiac-disease-linked pathologies.
| Associated autoimmune diseases or other conditions | |
|---|---|
| Type 1 diabetes | |
| Thyroid disorders (autoimmune or graves) | |
| Liver disease (autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis) | |
| Myasthenia gravis | |
| Primary biliary cirrhosis | |
| Primary sclerosing cholangitis | |
| Psoriasis | |
| Sjögren disease | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | |
| Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy | |
| Immunoglobulin A nephropathy | |
| Lymphocytic or microscopic colitis | |
| Autoimmune Addison's disease | |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | |
| Vitiligo or alopecia areata | |
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| Associated genetic diseases | |
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| Down syndrome | |
| Turner syndrome | |
| Williams syndrome | |
| IgA deficiency | |
| Commun variable immunodeficiency | |
Characteristics of exclusive or combined serological tests used to detect CD [11, 13, 18, 32].
| Serological tests | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | PPV (%) | NPV (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IgG AGA | 57–78 | 71–87 | 20–90 | 40–90 |
| IgA AGA | 55–100 | 65–100 | 30–100 | 70–100 |
| IgA EMA | 86–100 | 98–100 | 98–100 | 80–95 |
| IgA tTG | 90–96 | 91–97 | >90 | >95 |
| IgA tTG and EMA | 98–100 | 98–100 | >90 | >95 |
| IgA DGP | 98 | 94 | 92 | 98 |
| IgG DGP | 97 | 100 | 100 | 97 |
| IgA DGP + IgA tTG | 100 | 93 | 91 | 100 |
| IgG DGP + IgA tTG | 100 | 97 | 97 | 100 |
IgG: immunoglobulin G; IgA: immunoglobulin A; AGA: antigliadin antibodies; EMA: endomysial antibodies; tTG: tissue transglutaminase; DGP: deamidated gliadin peptide; PPV: positive predictive value; NPV: negative predictive value.
Figure 2Algorithm proposal for biologic diagnosis of celiac disease.
Histopathologic classification of CD based on Marsh-Oberhuber [56, 57], and Corazza and Villanacci [58] new grading system [12, 57, 59].
| Marsh-Oberhuber classification | |
|---|---|
| (i) Marsh I: infiltrative lesion, normal villous architecture and mucosa, and IEL increase (>30–40 lymphocytes/enterocytes counted). | |
| (ii) Marsh II: hyperplasic lesion; similar to Marsh I with crypt hyperplasia. | |
| (iii) Marsh III: destructive lesion, subdivided to the following: | |
| (a) partial villous atrophy, | |
| (b) subtotal villous atrophy, | |
| (c) total villous atrophy. | |
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| New grading system | |
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| (i) Grade A (nonatrophic): >25 IELs/100 enterocytes. | |
| (ii) Grade B (atrophic): villous-crypt ratio <3 : 1. | |
| (iii) Grade B2 (atrophic): no detectable villi. | |
Celiac disease differential diagnosis [12].
| Anorexia nervosa | |
| Autoimmune enteropathy | |
| Bacterial overgrowth | |
| Collagenous sprue | |
| Crohn's disease | |
| Giardiasis | |
| HIV enteropathy | |
| Hipogammaglobulinemia | |
| Gastroenterite infecciosa | |
| Intestinal lymphoma | |
| Radiation enteritis | |
| Ischemic enteritis | |
| Lactose intolerance | |
| Common variable immunodeficiency | |
| Soy protein intolerance | |
| Tropical sprue | |
| Tuberculosis | |
| Whipple's disease | |
| Zolliger-Ellison syndrome | |
| Eosinophilic gastroenteritis |
Indications of GFD in CD of children and adolescents [75].
| CD clinical form | Indications of GFD |
|---|---|
| Symptomatic | Therapeutic |
| Silent | Preventive: may be discussed |
| Latent | Surveillance |