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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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Celiac disease is thought to be a genetically based disorder reported mainly from European countries as well as countries to which Europeans have emigrated, including North America. This report documents a clinical experience of biopsy-defined celiac disease in 14 Asians diagnosed since 1988 in a single Canadian teaching hospital. Eleven were Indo-Canadians, including 10 of Punjabi descent. Other ethnic groups were also represented, including two Japanese and one Chinese patient. Abdominal pain was the most frequent presenting symptom. Anemia, particularly associated with a deficiency of iron was common, along with diarrhea and weight loss. Endoscopic studies documented lymphocytic gastric and colonic mucosal changes in over one-third of the cases while antibodies for tissue transglutaminase were positive in all patients tested. Dermatitis herpetiformis, diabetes mellitus and autoimmune liver disease were also documented. These findings indicate for the first time that adult celiac disease occurs in Asian populations living in North America, particularly in those of Punjabi descent.
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PMID:Biopsy-defined adult celiac disease in Asian-Canadians. 1291 16

The congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) is associated with increased risk for diabetes and thyroid disease. However, the mechanisms by which the rubella virus may cause these diseases are poorly characterized. Previous studies were carried out before modern immunological methods were available. The present study aimed at evaluating whether autoimmune mechanisms are involved in the pathogenesis by analysing antibodies to biochemically characterized autoantigens. The incidence of clinical diabetes, thyroid disease, coeliac disease and related antibodies (islet cell antibodies, ICA; insulin autoantibodies, IAA; antibodies to the tyrosine phosphatase related IA-2 molecule, IA-2 A and glutamic acid decarboxylase, GADA; thyroid peroxidase, TPO; tissue transglutaminase, TTGA; and gliadin, AGA) and HLA risk genotypes were analysed in 37 subjects affected by or exposed to rubella during fetal life (mean age 22.5 years). One patient had diabetes and four patients had clinical hypothyroidism at the time of the examination. ICA, IAA, GADA or IA-2 A were not detected in any of the patients, while five patients tested positive for TPO antibodies. Coeliac disease or TTGA were not observed. Eight patients carried the HLA-DR3-associated HLA-DQB1*02-DQA1*05 haplotype. These results provide no evidence of an increased frequency of markers for humoral beta-cell autoimmunity in patients with CRS suggesting that diabetes in CRS may be caused by other than autoimmune mechanisms.
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PMID:Humoral beta-cell autoimmunity is rare in patients with the congenital rubella syndrome. 1293 Mar 64

Celiac disease (Celiacal sprue = gluten-sensitive enteropathy = netropic sprue) is the all-life genetically determined autoimmune disease with permanent intolerance to gluten, which damages the intestinal mucous membrane and alterates the immune system. The atrophy and typical inflammatory changes of mucous membrane results in malabsorption with diarrhea, general weakness, anemia and weight loss. The clinical picture of celiac disease is considerably heterologous. Only 20-30% of patients suffer from active-classical form of the disease. Non-diagnosed, inactive forms of the disease form 70-80% of cases of celiac disease in adult individuals. The therapy is based on diet without gluten. Application of the diet usually results in clinical improvement and signs of the disease are diminished. The relapse of celiac disease occurs after a gluten load. Celiac disease and dermatitis Duhring are considered to be two equal forms how gluten enteropathy becomes manifest. Celiac disease is often associated with other autoimmune diseases (e.g. insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, autoimmune thyreoiditis). Untreated celiac disease still represents a serious medical risk, since it is an important precancerosis. Introduction of highly sensitive methods for the determination of antibodies against endomysium and tissue transglutaminase significantly extended possibilities of diagnosis and screening for celiac disease. It became obvious that the real incidence of celiac disease including the non-diagnosed forms of the disease in the European population is greater than 1:200 to 1:250.
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PMID:[Celiac disease--a severe disease]. 1450 71

Intolerance of gluten, resposible for Coeliac disease, is essentially shown by an auto-immune enteropathy, even if the cutaneous manifestation (herpetiform dermatitis) and perhaps certain neurological signs (cerebral syndrome, peripheral neuropathy) may be independent as well as associated with the intestinal illness. This affection is of immunological nature, occuring in a genetic field that predisposes to the illness (familial form: concordance of 70% in homozygote twins; 90% of patients show an HLA molecule of type DQ2, DQ8 in almost all the other cases. The exogenous factor is the gluten content contained in wheat, rye and barley, more precisely by the intermediary "the prolamines" which are the "reactive" element that induces a the same time an inflammatory reaction of type TH11 locally (expressed by the histological aspect of a duodenal biopsy evolving as villous atrophy) and a humoral response with production of anti-gliadine and anti-transglutaminase antibodies (the role of the latter enzyme is intervention in the local transformation of antigens to make them antigenic). It is an illness of adults as well as children and this point must now be emphasized. Recent epidemiological studies insist on a high prevalence (1/300 in Europe). Clinical expression, at the start very polymorphic and so misleading, before the appearance of the more classical signs of malabsorption and development, always feared, towards a lymphoma. These signs are haematological (anemia of various types, hyper platelets by hyposplenism, haemorrhagic signs) cutaneous (herpetiform dermatitis, cutaneous vasculitis) mucosal (aphtose), hepatic (cytolysis), neurophysical (fatigue, troubles of behaviour, cerebral syndrome, neuropathy) and osteo-articulitis (osteopenia, arthralgias, diffuse pains). The association of certain auto-immune illnesses must be emphasized (diabetes, Hashimoto thyroiditis, Gougerot disease, primitive biliary cirrhosis). To think early of the possibility of intolerance to gluten, is to give the means of a very easy diagnosis (measurement of anti-gliadin, anti-endomysium and anti-transglutaminase, and secondarily duodenal biopsy if necessary), and it is early elimination of gluten food which will make the various clinical manifestations disappear and so prevent the risk of evolution to a tumoral pathology.
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PMID:[A great imitator for the allergologist: intolerance to gluten]. 1513 80

Celiac sprue is permanent lifelong intolerance of gluten which in some sensitive individuals leads to an inflammation of various grades followed by atrophy of jejunum mucosa. Diagnosis of celiac sprue is based on proof of histopathological changes in jejunum mucosa as a result of presence of gluten in food. In recent years, serum endogenous myosin and tissue transglutaminase antibodies were used in a diagnostic algorithm. We distinguish active, silent, latent, and potential celiac sprue. Simultaneous incidence of type I diabetes mellitus and celiac sprue has been documented in a range of studies. Both diseases have common immunology and genetic characters. Prevalence of celiac sprue in patients with type I diabetes is several times higher compared to prevalence of this disease in the population. There is the prevalence of celiac sprue 3.6-5.1% in children with type I diabetes mellitus in the Czech Republic, silent form of the disease is the most frequent one. An effect of a strict gluten free diet on a metabolic control of diabetes has not been proved. It is necessary to assess (at least once per two years) actively and on regular basis endogenous myosin and/or tissue transglutaminase antibodies in patients with type I diabetes.
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PMID:[Diabetes and celiac disease]. 1530 43

Coeliac disease is widespread and occurs in 0.5-l per cent of the population. Most sufferers show atypical symptoms and might well remain undiagnosed. Endomysial or human transglutaminase autoantibody levels of type IgA can be recommended as screening instruments combined with s-IgA for exclusion of such deficiency. In contrast, there is a high frequency of false-positive IgA gliadin antibody test results, especially where coeliac disease is common, as in chronic liver disease, diabetes, thyroid disease and conditions with chromosomal aberrations (Down syndrome and Turner syndrome). Despite this, gliadin antibodies of type IgA are still the best marker for coeliac disease in children under two years of age. While mass screening is not to be recommended, case finding is worthwhile in well defined risk groups, i.e. in cohorts with autoimmune disease or chromosomal aberrations or in relatives to anyone with coeliac disease. A positive biopsy is still the gold standard for diagnosis.
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PMID:[Screening gor celiac disease can be justified in high-risk groups]. 1563 Dec 26

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is frequently associated with other autoimmune diseases. The occurrence of common features of autoimmune diseases and the coassociation of multiple autoimmune diseases in the same individual or family support the notion that there may be common genetic factors. We previously reported that immunogenetic markers of T1D were similar in Korean and U.S. families. We hypothesized that nonislet autoimmunity might be expressed in a similar manner in Korean as well as in Caucasian patients and correlated with the DRB1-DQB1 haplotypes. Twenty-five percent of Korean patients with T1D (32/128) had antithyroid autoantibodies (ATA+), whereas eight percent of age-matched controls were ATA+ [OR = 3.7 (95% CI:1.0-12.0), P < 0.05]. Twenty-three percent (84/369) of age-matched T1D patients from the U.S. had ATA (not statistically different from that in Koreans). None of the Korean patients nor the family members were positive for 21-hydroxylase (21OH) or transglutaminase autoantibodies (TG). In contrast, in U.S. patients, nine T1D patients (2.4%) were 21OH+ (not statistically different from that in Koreans) and 39 T1D patients (10.6%) were TG+ [OR = 30.7 (95% CI: 4.6-111), P < 10(-4) vs. Korean patients]. Nonislet autoimmunity is prevalent in Korean and U.S. patients with T1D and their family members, but specific forms of autoimmunity differ even after matching for their HLA haplotypes. Individuals with T1D and their relatives frequently develop a panel of autoantibodies, perhaps due to other common susceptibility genes that are shared among first-degree relatives.
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PMID:Differential expression of nonislet autoimmunity: comparison of Korean and U.S. patients with type 1 diabetes. 1569 95

Celiac disease (CD) is characterized by malabsorption of nutrients in the small intestine. The availability of highly specific and sensitive serologic tests has facilitated its diagnosis, increasing the disease prevalence. The aim of this study was to determine the clinical, laboratory, and histopathological features of CD in Turkish adults. Between 1968 and 2002, CD patients presenting to the Gastroenterology Unit were evaluated retrospectively. From 2002, newly diagnosed patients were prospectively followed up. Sixty patients (39 female, 21 male) were included in the study. Mean body mass index was 22.2 +/- 5.4 kg/m2. The most common symptoms were diarrhea, weight loss, and flatulence. Most common comorbidities were anemia, osteoporosis, type 1 diabetes mellitus, and steatohepatitis. Six (10.0%) patients had a family history of diabetes mellitus; one (1.7%) patient had a family history of CD. Plasma glucose and serum gamma-glutamyltransferase levels were significantly higher in females than males. Most common histopathological findings were increased lymphocytes in the lamina propria (76.2%) and villus epithelium (59.5%). Over the years, the cumulative frequency of CD increased more in females than males. This is the first study in the literature showing the characteristics of CD in Turkish adults. In our previous recent study, the prevalence of tissue transglutaminase antibody positivity in Turkish healthy blood donors was 1.3%, indicating a high prevalence of CD in our population. In this study, the cumulative frequency of CD increased more in females than males. With the better understanding and increased suspicion of the disease, more patients are being diagnosed in our population.
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PMID:Celiac disease in the Turkish population. 1571 51

As an autoimmune disease, type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM) can be associated with other autoimmune disorders. The aim of this study was to detect subclinically associated autoimmune thyroid disease, coeliac disease, and Addison's disease. The presence of autoantibodies was evaluated with special regard to the control of diabetes and to the clinical status of the patient. Fifty-one type 1 diabetic patients (22 men, 29 women, mean age 37+/-11 years, mean duration of diabetes 16+/-13 years) were included into this study. Specific antibodies to islet antigens--glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65), protein thyrosine phosphatase IA-2alpha, and to thyroid autoantigens--thyroid microsomal peroxidase (TPO) and thyroglobulin (TG) and also thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) were measured by RIA. Autoantigens of the small intestine--tissue transglutaminase autoantibodies (ATTG), IgA and IgG antibodies to gliadin (AGA-IgA, AGA-IgG) were evaluated by ELISA. Endomysial autoantibodies (EMA) and adrenal cortex antibodies (ACA) were detected by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. Eleven new cases of thyreopathy (22 % of patients) were detected by the assessment of thyroid autoantibodies and TSH. Two new cases of thyreotoxicosis were diagnosed during the study. Coeliac disease was diagnosed in at least two cases. Addison's disease was not diagnosed, although the ACA were positive in two patients. No influence of single or combined autoantibody positivity on the control of diabetes was found if normal organ function was preserved. In both patients with thyreotoxicosis the control of diabetes was worsened and improved after treatment. The screening of autoantibodies in type 1 diabetic patients could reveal subclinical cases of AITD or coeliac disease. Subclinical forms of these disorders have no influence on diabetes control. However, impaired organ function may be associated with the worsened control of diabetes as we demonstrated on two newly diagnosed cases of thyreotoxicosis. We suggest the need for the follow-up of patients with positive autoantibodies because further deterioration of the respective organs can be expected.
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PMID:Screening for associated autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes mellitus with respect to diabetes control. 1571 40

Type 1 diabetes mellitus is an autoimmune disorder characterized by destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells by T lymphocytes. In nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, a role has been hypothesized for dietary gluten proteins in the onset of diabetes, and because gluten dependence is the major feature of celiac disease, together with production of Abs to the autoantigen tissue transglutaminase (tTG), we looked for the presence of anti-tTG Abs in the serum of NOD mice and, to establish their origin, analyzed the Ab repertoire of NOD mice using phage display Ab libraries. We found significant levels of serum anti-tTG Abs and were able to isolate single-chain Ab fragments to mouse tTG mainly from the Ab libraries made from intestinal lymphocytes and to a lesser extent from splenocytes. Data from NOD mice on a gluten-free diet suggest that the anti-tTG response is not gluten-dependent. The intestinal Ab response to tTG is a feature of NOD mice, but the underlying mechanisms remain obscure.
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PMID:Characterization of the anti-tissue transglutaminase antibody response in nonobese diabetic mice. 1584 87


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