- T cell mediated autoimmune disease of small bowel in which prolamine intolerance causes villous atrophy and malabsorption
- a.k.a gluten sensitive enteropathy
- 95%
HLA DQ2 and
HLA DQ8
- prevalence : 1 in 300-1500 (more common in Irish)
- occurs at any age (peaks in infancy and 50-60)
- presents with
steatorrhea, diarrhea, abdominal pain, bloating,
aphthous ulcer, weight loss, iron deficiency
anemia, osteomalacia,
failure to thrive
- associated with
dermatitis herpetiformis
- diagnosis:
IgA endomysial antibodies , alpha-gliadin antibodies or
anti-transglutaminase antibodies (IgG if
IgA deficient - 10% of Coeliac disease)
-
duodenal/jejunal biopsy (gold standard):
subtotal villous atrophy,
hypertrophied crypts of Lieberkuhn, increase in intraepithelial lymphocytes (biopsy reverse/improvement with a gluten free diet)
- treatment:
lifelong gluten free diet (wheat, barley, rye, oats)
- complications: risk of
malignancy (esophageal, gastric, small bowel),
anemia, hyposplenism, lactose intolerance, GI T cell lymphoma (suspect if refractory symptom or weight loss)