AI Article Synopsis

  • The gluten-free diet (GFD) is essential for managing celiac disease, but strict adherence is challenging due to the need for accessible healthcare resources.
  • Effectively managing celiac disease requires a multidisciplinary team, including doctors, dietitians, and psychologists, to address various complexities and ensure proper nutritional support.
  • This manuscript aims to enhance clinical practices for monitoring celiac disease, focusing on the nutritional risks of an improperly followed GFD and promoting a collaborative approach among healthcare professionals.

Article Abstract

The gluten-free diet (GFD) remains a complex paradigm in managing celiac disease (CeD) in children and adults, and there are many reasons why GFD adherence should be strict to improve outcomes. However, this is a challenging task for patients, since they need to have access to quality healthcare resources that facilitate optimal GFD adherence. Understanding the strengths and weaknesses of the GFD, tackling coexisting nutritional deficiencies, and dealing with complex situations, such as seronegative CeD or non-responsive CeD, all require the involvement of a multidisciplinary team. The short- and long-term follow-up of CeD patients should preferably be performed by a combined Gastroenterology and Nutrition service with well-defined quality standards and the multidisciplinary involvement of physicians, nurses, dietitians, and psychologists. Nutritional advice and counseling by an experienced dietitian can reduce the costs associated with long-term follow-up of CeD patients. Likewise, psychological interventions may be essential in specific scenarios where implementing and sustaining a lifelong GFD can cause a significant psychological burden for patients. This manuscript aims to provide guidelines to improve clinical practice in the follow-up and monitoring of CeD patients and provide information on the nutritional risks of an ill-advised GFD. Clinicians, biochemists, food technologists, dietitians, and psychologists with a global view of the disease have been involved in its writing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10537989PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15184013DOI Listing

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