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Celiac disease in the developing countries: a new and challenging public health problem. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Celiac disease, once thought to primarily affect Europeans, has been found to be common in developing countries where wheat is a staple diet, highlighting its significance as a global health issue.
  • New serological tests have made it easier to diagnose celiac disease, prompting a need for increased awareness among physicians to recognize its various clinical presentations.
  • In developing regions, the lack of commercial gluten-free products makes adherence to a gluten-free diet difficult, necessitating both population-wide and targeted screening for early detection of celiac disease.

Article Abstract

In the past, celiac disease was believed to be a chronic enteropathy, almost exclusively affecting people of European origin. The availability of new, simple, very sensitive and specific serological tests (anti-gliadin, anti-endomysium and anti-transglutaminase antibody assays) have shown that celiac disease is common not only in Europe and in people of European ancestry but also in the developing countries where the major staple diet is wheat (Southern Asia, the Middle East, North West and East Africa, South America), both in the general population and in the groups at risk. Gluten intolerance thus appears to be a widespread public health problem and an increased level of awareness and clinical suspicion are needed in the New World where physicians must learn to recognize the variable clinical presentations (classical, atypical and silent forms) of celiac disease. In the developing countries, both serological screening in the general population and serological testing in groups at risk are necessary for an early identification of celiac patients. The gluten-free diet poses a challenging public health problem in the developing countries, especially since commercial gluten-free products are not available.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4146836PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v13.i15.2153DOI Listing

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