Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) may cause changes throughout the gastrointestinal tract. The pathology is best described in the distal duodenum and jejunum. It is also associated with lymphocytic gastritis (LG) and varioliform gastritis in adults and children, but the histologic spectrum in the gastric biopsy and the clinical implications are undefined. In this report we relate our experience with the clinical, endoscopic, and histologic changes in gastric biopsies in CD in childhood.
Slides (hematoxylin and eosin stained) were reviewed from 33 celiac children, 5 having had more than 1 gastric biopsy during a 7-year period. Gastric intraepithelial lymphocyte (IEL) counts were compared with those of 10 histologically normal controls (normal range, 1–7 IEL/100 antral or body epithelial cells) and 10 nonceliac chronic gastritis (CG) biopsies without
We conclude that in CD children, the stomach is endoscopically unremarkable but may show LG, or LG/CG with or without mucin depletion, or occasionally appear normal. Gastric histology returned to normal with gluten withdrawal. Normal gastric histology is not typical, but does not exclude CD.
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