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Non-diarrheal celiac disease: a report of 31 cases from northern India.

AbstractBACKGROUND AND AIMS:
Non-diarrheal presentation of celiac disease (CD) is being increasingly recognized. Data on this form of CD from India are limited.
METHODS:
Consecutive patients with CD presenting to a tertiary referral center in northern India over a 3-year period were studied, with special emphasis on non-diarrheal celiac disease (NDCD). Diagnosis was based on the presence of autoantibodies typical of CD (IgA anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies and/ or IgA endomysial antibodies), abnormal duodenal biopsy and response to gluten-free diet (GFD). Clinical, hematological and histological responses were assessed over a one-year period after instituting GFD.
RESULTS:
Of 86 patients with CD, 31 (16 children, 15 adult) had NDCD. Mean (SD) age of these children (12 boys) and adults (4 male) was 10.2 (4.2) y and 35.3 (12.0) y, respectively. Failure to thrive was the most common (11/16) presentation in children, as was refractory anemia in adults (10/15). Malabsorption was found in 8 adults (54%) and 10 children (64%) with NCCD. The duration from onset of symptoms to diagnosis was 2.9 (1.5) y in children and 3.3 (0.3) y in adults. There was significant improvement in body weight (children--baseline 18.9 [5.8] Kg, follow up 27.4 [12.4] Kg; adults--baseline 47.6 [18.2] Kg, follow up 54.9 [5.1] Kg) and hemoglobin (children--8.1 [2.0] g/dL to 11.2 [1.4] g/dL; adults--7.3 [2.3] g/dL to 9.7 [1.7] g/dL) in both groups after one year of GFD; duodenal biopsy also improved, with a majority of patients attaining normal to IIIa Marsh grading. Five adults and all children had evidence of metabolic bone disease at presentation, which did not revert completely with GFD. Eight adults and nine children showed dietary transgression 6 weeks after starting GFD.
CONCLUSION:
NDCD ac-counted for nearly one-third of all cases with CD at our center, with 'failure to thrive' and refractory anemia being the most common presentations in children and adults, respectively.
AuthorsNaresh Agarwal, A S Puri, Rajiv Grover
JournalIndian journal of gastroenterology : official journal of the Indian Society of Gastroenterology (Indian J Gastroenterol) 2007 May-Jun Vol. 26 Issue 3 Pg. 122-6 ISSN: 0254-8860 [Print] India
PMID17704578 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Topics
  • Adult
  • Celiac Disease (physiopathology)
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • India
  • Male
  • Prospective Studies

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