A. Ferguson et al., SPECTRUM OF EXPRESSION OF INTESTINAL CELLULAR-IMMUNITY - PROPOSAL FORA CHANGE IN DIAGNOSTIC-CRITERIA OF CELIAC-DISEASE, Annals of allergy, 71(1), 1993, pp. 29-32
The clinical heterogeneity of celiac disease is well recognized, with
great variability in malabsorption and in gastrointestinal symptoms of
patients with active celiac disease, and the fairly common occurrence
of silent celiac disease (ie, an apparently healthy individual with a
flat small bowel mucosa). Research in experimental animals has shown
that expression of cell-mediated immunity in the gut mucosa occurs in
a spectrum of pathologies ranging from minimal enteropathy with a high
count of intra-epithelial lymphocytes to the celiac-like lesion with
short villi and long crypts. A similar range of pathology is seen in c
eliac patients in some circumstances, with low grade enteropathy occur
ring in the early stages of gluten challenge, in patients taking a low
gluten diet, and also in some patients with dermatitis herpetiformis.
In so-called latent celiac disease, sophisticated immunologic studies
may reveal a high intra-epithelial lymphocyte count, an increased gam
ma delta intra-epithelial lymphocyte count, and a celiac-like intestin
al antibody abnormality with overexpression of mucosal IgM responses.
If further work confirms that one or more of these features may be the
only manifestation of gluten-sensitive disease in some newly presenti
ng patients, the current definition of celiac disease (a flat mucosa,
gluten-sensitive) will need to be revised.