| Literature DB >> 25404189 |
Umberto Volta1, Giacomo Caio, Vincenzo Stanghellini, Roberto De Giorgio.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Celiac disease is a multiform, challenging condition characterized by extremely variable features. Our goal was to define clinical, serological and histopathological findings in a large cohort of celiacs diagnosed in a single referral center.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25404189 PMCID: PMC4236812 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-014-0194-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Figure 1The annual distribution of CD diagnoses in the referral center of the St. Orsola-Malpighi University Hospital from 1998 to 2012. Of the 770 diagnosed patients, 318 (41.2%) were identified in the first 10 years (1998-2007), whereas the other 452 (58.8%) were diagnosed in the last five years (2008-2012).
Figure 2Prevalence of symptomatic and subclinical phenotypes in the 770 CD patients. Note that 610 patients (79%) were diagnosed as symptomatic, whereas the remaining 160 (21%) were classified as subclinical CD. Of the 610 symptomatic patients, 210 (34%) displayed the classical onset with diarrhea and malabsorption (regardless of extraintestinal manifestations), whereas the other 400 showed the non-classical form with gastrointestinal symptoms (other than diarrhea) and extraintestinal manifestations.
Figure 3Gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms in 770 CD patients. A) Symptoms related to gastrointestinal tract included diarrhea (27%), bloating (20%), aphthous stomatitis (18%), alternate bowel habit (15%), constipation (13%) and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) (12%). B) Extraintestinal manifestations, alone or in combination with gastrointestinal symptoms/signs, included osteopenia/osteoporosis (52%), anemia (34%), cryptogenic hypertransaminasemia (29%), recurrent miscarriages (12%), IgE-mediated allergy (9%), headache (5%) and fibromyalgia-like symptoms (2.2%).
Clinical presentation, histology, genetics and associated disorders in patients with seronegative celiac disease
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| #1 | Male | 58 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3c | 1 | Neg | IgG + ve | Autoimmune thyroiditis |
| #2 | Female | 34 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3a | 1 | Neg | IgG + ve | PBC |
| #3 | Female | 37 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3c | 1 | Neg | Neg | None |
| #4 | Female | 75 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3c | 1 | Neg | Neg | None |
| #5 | Female | 45 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3a | 1 | Neg | Neg | None |
| #6 | Female | 55 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3c | 1 | Neg | IgG + ve | Gluten ataxia |
| #7 | Male | 61 | Classical | DQ8+ | 3b | 1 | Neg | Neg | Peripheral neuropathy |
| #8 | Female | 48 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3c | 1 | Neg | Neg | None |
| #9 | Female | 49 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3a | 1 | Neg | IgG + ve; IgA + ve | Autoimmune |
| #10 | Female | 30 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3b | 1 | Neg | Neg | None |
| #11 | Female | 63 | Classical | DQ2+ | 3c | 1 | Neg | Neg | None |
Note: Anti-TG2: tissue transglutaminase antibodies, EmA: endomysial antibodies, DGP: deamidated gliadin antibodies, AGA: gliadin antibodies, GFD; gluten-free diet, PBC; primary biliary cirrhosis; duodenal biopsy scored according to Marsh-Oberhüber classification: "3a", partial; "3b", subtotal; "3c", total villous atrophy; "1" indicates increased intraepithelial lymphocytes.
Clinical and genetic features of the 6 celiac disease patients developing complications
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| #1 | M | 42 | Classical | DQ2 + ° | 8 | 45 | EATCL | Alive, 54 yrs |
| #2 | F | 66 | Classical | DQ2+ | 10 | 70 | RCD type 1 | Alive, 73 yrs |
| #3 | F | 52 | Classical | DQ2 + ° | 5 | 56 | RCD type 1 | Alive, 64 yrs |
| #4 | F | 48 | Classical | DQ2+ | 6 | 51 | Small bowel carcinoma | Dead, 53 yrs |
| #5 | F | 65 | Classical | DQ2 + ° | 11 | 65 | Small bowel carcinoma | Alive, 76 yrs |
| #6 | F | 55 | Classical | DQ2+ | 7 | 59 | RCD type 1 | Alive, 66 yrs |
EATCL, enteropathy associated T-cell lymphoma; RCD, refractory celiac disease.
°DQ2 homozygosis (DQB1 *0201 on both chromosomes) was established in case #1, #3 and #5.