Pathogenesis of Celiac disease Flashcards

1
Q

When are small bowel biopsies taken?

A

In adults, not in children. And after serology.

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2
Q

What is sensitivity?

A

Sensitivity is the ability to detect the disease if it is really present.

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3
Q

What is specificity?

A

Specificity is the ability to exclude persons who do not have the disease.

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4
Q

When can you get false negative serology in CD?

A

IgA-deficiency, low gluten intake, and inadequate test systems.

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5
Q

How do you diagnose Coeliac disease in individuals on a gluten-free diet?

A
  • The gluten challenge, a 2 week GC is sufficient to elevate antibody titers if evaluated after 4 weeks.
  • Measuring gliadin specific T-cells in peripheral blood.
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6
Q

What is refractory celiac disease (RCD)?

A

persisting villous atrophy, crypt hyperplasia, and intraepithelial lymphocytosis despite a strict gluten-free diet (GFD) of >12 months.

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7
Q

What is the difference between RCDI and RCDII?

A

In type 1 there are no aberrant IEL and there is a higher survival risk, in type 2 there are aberrant IEL and a high risk to develop T-cell lymphoma.

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8
Q

What are aberrant IEL?

A

aberrant intraepithelial lymphocytes have loss of CD8 expression and surface CD3 expression.

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9
Q

How can you identify aberrant IEL?

A

TCR clonality analysis (hypervariation VDJ junction), immunohistochemistry, and flow cytometry (most sensitive).

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