Malaborption and Coeliac Flashcards
What is coeliac disease? [3]
Ep
Autoimmune disease involving abnormal reaction to Gliadin - present in gluten Inflammation via tissue transglutaminae - Villus atrophy and malabsorption Ep: F>M, infancy or 50-60y/o
Presentation of coeliac disease [6]
Diarrhoea, steatorrhea Weight loss Anaemia - iron, b12, folate (normochromic) Abdo pain and bloating Dermatitis herpetiformis Aphthous ulcers
What should you do if someone has these symptoms
Coeliac serology
Must be on gluten to do this
What are RF for coeliac [8]
HLA DQ2 / DQ8 Autoimmune thyroid / gastritis / hepatitis Type 1 DM IgA deficiency IBS PBC Down's FH
Coeliac screening [2]
Patients with type I DM or autoimmune thyroid disease should be screened for coeliac at diagnosis
What tests are part of coeliac serology? [3]
- IgA and TTG IgA
- But IgA def can cause false neg so if IgA is low, do endomysial Ab IgG
* need to be on gluten for 6w before testing*
What is the definitive test for coeliac?
What are features of coeliac [3]
What are the ESPGHAN guidelines?
OGD duodenal biopsy:
Villous atrophy
Crypt hyperplasia
Lymphocyte infiltration
ESPGHAN guidelines: NO biopsy required if anti-TTG x10 upper limit of normal, anti-endomysial IgG positive and HLA-DQ2 or DQ8 positive
What will blood investigations show? [6]
• FBC + film and haematinics:
reduced ferritin and folate, increased or decreased MCV, hyposplenism (Howell-Jolly bodies, target cells)
• Other bloods:
LFT (reduced albumin), INR, bone profile, B12
How do you Dx in children [2]
Serology
HLA status
Management of coeliac [4]
• Diet:
- lifelong gluten free diet (DO NOT remove before serological or histological dx as features will resolve)
- AVOID barley, rye, oats, wheat; CAN have maize, soya, rice
• Functional hyposplenism: pneumococcal vaccination
What are complications [7]
Hyposplenism Subfertility Neuropathy Enteropathy associated T cell lymphoma of small bowel small bowel adenocarcinoma breast cancer bladder cancer
What are the most common causes of malabsorption [6]
Coeliac IBD Chronic pancreatitis Amyloid PBS Biliary obstruction
What are infectious causes of malbasorption [6]
Tropical sprue HIV Giardia lambila Cryptospordium Traveller's Whipples
What is tropical spure
Folate or b12 deficiency causing inflammation
Whipple’s disease features [6]
It is more common in those who are HLA-B27 positive and in middle-aged men.
Features
- malabsorption: diarrhoea, weight loss
- large-joint arthralgia
- lymphadenopathy
- skin: hyperpigmentation and photosensitivity
- pleurisy, pericarditis
- neurological symptoms (rare): ophthalmoplegia, dementia, seizures, ataxia, myoclonus