View Single Post
Old 09-14-2006, 10:10 PM
annelb annelb is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 239
15 yr Member
annelb annelb is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 239
15 yr Member
Default

Hi Hanna, sorry to hear that your son's doctors don't understand gluten sensitivity - frustrating. Did they even take biopsies of the small intestine. I have a friend who had an endoscopy and when gastritis and h. pylori were found, that was the end of the search - no biopsies other than of the stomach.


Here is a new article. Is it saying that 30 of the 80 people with CD had H.pylori? That is a large percentage.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...play&DB=pubmed

Quote:
Am J Gastroenterol. 2006 Aug;101(8):1880-5. Epub 2006 Jun 16.

Helicobacter pylori Infection in patients with celiac disease.

Villanacci V, Bassotti G, Liserre B, Lanzini A, Lanzarotto F, Genta RM.

2nd Pathology Section, Spedali Civili, Brescia, Brescia, Italy.

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Patients with Helicobacter pylori gastritis are more likely to have increased duodenal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL); this can be reversed by H. pylori eradication. We hypothesized that: (1) H. pylori-infected celiac disease (CD) patients could have different clinicopathological features from noninfected subjects; and (2) the histopathological responses to a gluten-free diet could be different in H. pylori-infected and noninfected patients. METHODS: Duodenal and gastric biopsies obtained from 80 adults with histologically and serologically confirmed CD before and after 12-18 months of a gluten-free diet were retrospectively evaluated. Gastritis was classified and scored according to the Updated Sydney System; duodenal biopsies were classified using both the Marsh-Oberhuber and a simplified classification proposed by our group. RESULTS: At baseline, 30 patients had H. pylori infection and 50 did not; at follow-up five new infections were detected. Fifteen patients (3 H. pylori-positive and 12 negative) had lymphocytic gastritis. At baseline, a greater proportion of H. pylori-negative patients had severe villous atrophy (p < 0.01), but milder forms were more prevalent in H. pylori-positive patients (p < 0.01). After a gluten-free diet, significant improvement occurred in all duodenal features (p < 0.001), irrespective of H. pylori status; gastric variables did not change, except for lymphocytic, which resolved in 2 infected and 10 noninfected patients. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical features of CD patients are unrelated to H. pylori gastritis, and a gluten-free diet is equally effective in infected as in uninfected patients. The higher prevalence of milder duodenal lesions in CD patients with H. pylori infection suggests that lymphocytosis induced by H. pylori gastric infection becomes less obvious as profound inflammatory and structural changes alter the mucosal architecture. This study also provides further support for a pathogenetic relationship between CD and lymphocytic gastritis.

PMID: 16780559 [PubMed - in process]
annelb is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote