Abstract

A female patient presented with nasal septal perforation that did not respond to conventional therapeutic management. Later, because of a malabsorption problem in one of her children, she underwent analytic tests and distal duodenal biopsy, which revealed that she was suffering from subclinical/silent celiac disease. The treatment, a gluten-free diet, unexpectedly resulted in the cessation of the destructive nasal process. Four years later, the patient remains asymptomatic. Nasal septal perforation might constitute a new entity associated with celiac disease hitherto not described in the literature.

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