Abstract

Celiac disease is receiving much attention due to the gluten-free diet trend. Many health-conscious individuals practice a gluten-free diet, even if they do not have celiac disease. As it is an autoimmune disorder, it is associated with many other autoimmune diseases. We were interested in one skin condition, another autoimmune disorder lichen planus as a correlative factor for celiac disease. The following systematic review may give some clues. We searched online resources including PubMed, PubMed Central, Cochrane library, and Google scholar for systematic reviews, traditional reviews, randomized controlled trials, and meta-analysis on celiac disease and lichen planus. We included human studies published in peer-reviewed journals in the English language. After reviewing 2389 initial results of our search, we excluded 1250 duplicates, 1108 abstracts, 42 irrelevant articles. We assessed the remaining 26 articles for their quality using various quality assessment tools.After the quality assessment, we included nine final articles in our systematic review. Out of these nine studies, there were four systematic reviews, one traditional review, two case reports, and two observational studies. Only two articles had exclusively studied the specific association between celiac and lichen planus. The remaining studies included data that gave an overall association between other skin manifestations of celiac disease.From our study, we could not establish the relationship between celiac disease and lichen planus. We need more case-control studies and clinical trials with a larger population to get conclusive data. From current data, we can conclude that both immunological processes correlate but there is no causation. There is also a need for clinical trials to explore the exacerbation of lichen planus due to celiac disease.

Highlights

  • BackgroundWe saw a case of a 60-year-old patient discovered itchy skin lesions

  • Many health-conscious individuals practice a gluten-free diet, even if they do not have celiac disease. As it is an autoimmune disorder, it is associated with many other autoimmune diseases

  • We were interested in one skin condition, another autoimmune disorder lichen planus as a correlative factor for celiac disease

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Summary

Introduction

We saw a case of a 60-year-old patient discovered itchy skin lesions. Later, they diagnosed the lesions as lichen planus. He used multiple topical applications, including steroids, but no relief Later he was diagnosed with celiac disease by endoscopy and biopsy. He noticed that removing gluten from his diet improved his skin condition. The lesions were not itchy anymore, and with time and continued gluten-free diet, disappeared. He would advise fellow lichen planus patients to remove gluten from the diet and see the results.

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