Abstract

Celiac disease (CD) is a multisystemic disorder with different clinical expressions, from malabsorption with diarrhea, anemia, and nutritional compromise to extraintestinal manifestations. Anemia might be the only clinical expression of the disease, and iron deficiency anemia is considered one of the most frequent extraintestinal clinical manifestations of CD. Therefore, CD should be suspected in the presence of anemia without a known etiology. Assessment of tissue anti-transglutaminase and anti-endomysial antibodies are indicated in these cases and, if positive, digestive endoscopy and intestinal biopsy should be performed. Anemia in CD has a multifactorial pathogenesis and, although it is frequently a consequence of iron deficiency, it can be caused by deficiencies of folate or vitamin B12, or by blood loss or by its association with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) or other associated diseases. The association between CD and IBD should be considered during anemia treatment in patients with IBD, because the similarity of symptoms could delay the diagnosis. Vitamin B12 deficiency is common in CD and may be responsible for anemia and peripheral myeloneuropathy. Folate deficiency is a well-known cause of anemia in adults, but there is little information in children with CD; it is still unknown if anemia is a symptom of the most typical CD in adult patients either by predisposition due to the fact of age or because biochemical and clinical manifestations take longer to appear.

Highlights

  • Celiac disease (CD) is one of the most frequent genetic diseases, affecting 1% of the world population

  • Iron status parameters are similar in patients with Anemia of chronic disease (ACD) and those usually found during inflammatory processes, and an isolated iron deficiency or other pathogenic mechanisms could not be the explanation for their anemia

  • In a study [89] conducted in adult patients with CD and persistent Iron deficiency anemia (IDA), 23% of patients showed lesions that were detected by video capsule endoscopy (VCE) of the small intestine

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Summary

A Comprehensive Review

Rafael Martín-Masot 1 , Maria Teresa Nestares 2, * , Javier Diaz-Castro 2 , Inmaculada López-Aliaga 2 , Maria Jose Muñoz Alférez 2 , Jorge Moreno-Fernandez 2. Virgen de las Nieves University Hospital, 18014 Granada, Spain. Received: 6 September 2019; Accepted: 15 October 2019; Published: 23 October 2019

Introduction
Iron Deficiency
B12 Deficiency
Copper and Zinc Deficiency
Aplastic Anemia and Celiac Disease
Anemia of Chronic Disease
Refractory Anemia to the Gluten-Free Diet
Findings
Conclusions and Future Perspectives
Full Text
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