Coeliac Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the epidemiology of coeliac disease?

A

Females more susceptible than males.
Any age.
1% of UK - rare in africa.
10% prevalence in first degree relatives.
96% due to HLA-DQ2 (rest are usually HLA-DQ8) .

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2
Q

What is the infectious hypothesis of coeliac disease?

A

If infected with adenovirus 12 and genetically susceptible, a peptide in alpha-gliadin is similar ot that in E1b portion of the virus. This can lead to cross reactivity with alpha-gliadin.

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3
Q

Describe the pathophysiology of alpha-gliadin reaction in coeliac disease?

A

alpha-gliadin digestion produces a stable peptide which is absorbed into the lamina propria.
Exposure to TTG from damaged epithelia leads to deamination of glutamine and bonding to HLA-DQ2.
This activates proinflammatory T cell responses.

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4
Q

How would infants, older children and adults present with coeliac disease?

A

Infants: Usually 4-24 months when cereals have been introduced. Impaired growth, diarrhoea, vomiting, abdominal distention.

Older Children: Anaemia, short stature, pubertal delay, abdominal pain.

Adults: Diarrhoea, bloating, flatulence, abdominal pain, chronic/recurrent IDA, nutritional deficiency, refuced fertility/amenorrhoea, osteoporosis, unexplained high AST/ALT, neurological symptoms e.g. epilepsy.

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5
Q

Describe the pathology of coeliac disease?

A

Muscosal inflammation can vary and be patchy.
Loss of villous height - can be short, broad, flat, atrophied.
Mucosal thickness stays the same as crypts elongate (hypertrophy).
Increased plasma cells and intraepithelial lymphocytes.

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6
Q

List some indicators of small bowel disease?

A

Malabsorption/electrolyte imblalances: Folate, Calcium, Vit. D, Vit K (coagulopathy), Magnesium.
Chronic or recurrent IDA.

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7
Q

How is coeliac disease diagnosed?

A

Serology;

  • IgA tTG
  • IgA EMA

Endoscopy;

  • Scalloping of intenstinal folds, less folds.
  • Mozaic ‘crakced mud’ patterned mucosa.
  • Prominant submucosal vessels and nodular mucosa.

Biopsy;

  • From distal duodenum.
  • Minimum 4 biopsies due to patchy changes.
  • Must be on gluten-rich diet.
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8
Q

List some diseases associated with coeliac disease?

A

Giardiasis (parasitic infection).
Dermatitis herpetiformis (itchy rash on extensor surfaces).
Type 1 diabetes.

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9
Q

Outline dietary advice for coeliac disease?

A

Avoid wheat, barley and rye.
Can still eat oats, rice, maize.

Need to watch out for lactose intolerance due to destruction of brush border enzymes due to villous atrophy.

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10
Q

Outline other complications of having coeliac disease?

A

Infection: Functional hypospelnism (lymphocyte loss).
Osteoporosis
Refractory Coeliac Disease: Recurrent malabsorption despite strict adherence to a gluten free diet.
Cancer: Small bowel adenocarcinoma (risk decreased if you adhere to gluten free).

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