Coeliac disease Flashcards

1
Q

Define coeliac disease.

A

Inflammatory disease caused by intolerance to gluten, causing chronic intestinal malabsorption.

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2
Q

What kind of foods have gluten?

A

Cereals:

Wheat

Barley

Rye

Oats

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3
Q

What main clinical features should suggest coeliac disease as a diagnosis?

A

Diarrhoea

Weight loss

Anaemia (esp if iron/B12 is low)

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4
Q

What is the aetiology of Coeliac disease?

A

Sensitivity to the gliadin component of the cereal protein, gluten, triggers an immunological reaction in the small intestine leading to mucosal damage and loss of villi.

10% of 1st degree relatives being affected and there is a clear genetic susceptibility associated with HLA-B8, DR3, DQW2.

HLADQ2 in 95%; the rest are DQ8; autoimmune disease;

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5
Q

What are the HLA associations in Coeliac disease?

A

It is strongly associated with:

  • HLA-DQ2 (95% of patients)
  • HLA-DQ8 (80%)
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6
Q

How common is coeliac disease?

A
  • Affects 1% of the population
  • Commoner if Irish
  • Rare in East Asia
  • Any age but peaks in childhood and 50–60yrs
  • M=F
  • Relative risk in 1st-degree relatives is 6×.
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7
Q

What are the risk factors for coeliac disease?

A
  • FH of coeliac
  • IgA deficiency
  • Other specific autoimmune diseases:
    • Type 1 diabetes
    • AI thyroid disease
  • Down’s syndrome

Other: Sjogren;s, IBD, primary biliary cholangitis, psoriasis

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8
Q

Which type of skin condition is associated with Coeliac disease?

A

dermatitis herpetiformis.

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9
Q

What are the clinical features of Coeliac disease?

A
  • Diarrhoea - chronic , intermittent
  • Persistent GI symptoms e.g. N&V
  • Prolonged fatigue (‘tired all the time’)
  • Cramping
  • Distension
  • Abdominal discomfort, pain, bloating
  • Dermatitis herpetiformis - specific
  • Weight loss - sudden or unexpected
  • Fe deficiency - otherwise unexplained

Mimics IBS

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10
Q

What are the signs of coeliac disease on examination?

A
  • Anaemia
  • Failure to thrive - short stature, abdominal distension, wasted buttocks in children. Triceps skin fold thickness givesn an indication of fat stores
  • Vitamin/mineral deficiencies (e.g. osteomalacia, easy bruising)
  • Apthous ulcers, angular stomatitis
  • Dermatitis herpetiformis - intense, itchy blisters on elbows, knees or buttocks

Other:

  • Dental enamel hypoplasia - due to abnormalities in mineralisation
  • Peripheral neuropathy - either vitamin deficiencies (B12, E, or D; folate or pyridoxine) or autoimmune activity against neural antigens
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11
Q

What must you ensure before testing for Coeliac?

A

That the patient is currently ingesting gluten

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12
Q

What investigations would you do for coeliac disease?

A

Diagnosis:

  1. Anti-tTG (IgA)* - 1st line is tissue transglutaminase antibody testing according to NICE
  2. EMA - endomyseal antibody; more expensive than TTG but checks for false negative TTG.
  3. Endoscopic INTESTINAL biopsy - “gold standard” for diagnosis; usually in duodenum but sometimes jejunum.

NB: anti-gliadin are NOT recommended; anti-casein are found in some patients. *False negative in IgA deficiency.

Other:

FBC (low Hb, high RCDW, low B12, low ferritin), folate deficiency (and rarely B12) may cause macrocytic anaemia

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13
Q

What findings on biopsy are suggestive of Coeliac?

A
  • villous atrophy
  • crypt hyperplasia
  • increase in intraepithelial lymphocytes
  • lamina propria infiltration with lymphocytes
Complete atrophy of the villi with flat mucosa and marked crypt hyperplasia. Intraepithelial lymphocytosis. Dense mixed inflammatory infiltrate in the lamina propria
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14
Q

Which type of endocrine disorder is associated with Coeliac disease?

A

Type I diabetes

autoimmune thyroid disease

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15
Q

How do you manage coeliac disease?

A

Advice -

  • withdrawal of gluten from diet i.e. wheat (bread, pasta, pastry), barley (beer), rye, oats (although some tolerate oats)
  • NB rice, maize, soya, potatoes and sugar are okay
  • Alternatives are sometimes prescribed

Referral to dietician/gastroenterologist

Coeliac Society

Medical -

  • Vitamin and mineral supplements - Ca, Vit D +/- iron
  • Pneumococcal vaccine - patients with Coeliac have a degree of hyposplenism; boosted every 5yrs

Coeliac crisis - rehydrate, correct electrolytes and give corticosteroids.

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16
Q

What are the possible complications of coeliac disease?

A
  • Iron/folate/Vit B12 deficiency
  • Osteoporosis/osteopenia - improves within 1yr of gluten withdrawal
  • Dermatitis herpetiformis
  • Malignancy - increased risk of lymphoma, gastric, oesophageal, colorectal malignancy.
  • Idiopathic recurrent acute pancreatitis/chronic pancreatitis
  • Infection - hyposplenism so offer flu and pneumococcal vaccinations
  • Idiopathic recurrent acute/chronic pancreatitis
17
Q

What is the prognosis with coeliac disease?

A
  • Most patients make full recovery with gluten-free diet (for life)
  • Histological changes may take longer to resolve
  • Can monitor adherence to non-gluten diet with TTG titres
18
Q

What abnormalities might you see on blood film in coeliac disease?

A

Target cells and Howell-Jolly bodies may be seen in coeliac disease → hyposplenism