Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-C01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:53


290 Celiac Sprue and Malabsorption

Physical
■mooth, red tongue; cracking at mouth corners; blistering skin rash
(dermatitis herpetiformis); protrusion of abdomen (“pot belly” in
children); pallor; bruising; edema
tests
Basic Blood:
■anemia (iron deficiency; folate/vitamin B12 deficiency); hypo-
albuminemia; elevated alkaline phosphatase; reduced serum cal-
cium, magnesium, zinc

Basic Urine:
■none usually helpful; see xylose test under specific diagnostic tests

Specific Diagnostic:
■Blood: Total serum IgA; IgA antibodies: transglutaminase (more sen-
sitive than endomysial; alpha-gliadin and reticulin have lower speci-
ficity)
■Functional tests of malabsorption: elevated quantitative fecal fat (72-
hour); reduced xylose absorption (25 g ingested; 5-hour urine excre-
tion)
■Small intestinal biopsy (via upper GI endoscopy to distal
duodenum): flat villi with change of elongated columnar cells to
cuboidal shape; lymphocyte infiltration of enterocyte surface layer;
lymphocyte and plasma cell infiltration of subepithelium (lamina
propria)

differential diagnosis
■maldigestion due to pancreatic insufficiency (chronic pancreatitis)
or pancreatic duct obstruction (pancreatic carcinoma); fecal fat ele-
vated but xylose absorption normal
■other intestinal enteropathies (extensive small intestinal Crohn’s dis-
ease, hypogammaglobulinemia, tropical sprue, Whipple’s disease;
carcinomatosis; these diseases rarely produce the completely flat
intestinal biopsy seen in celiac sprue)
■drugs that cause malabsorption: colchicine, neomycin, cholestyra-
mine, laxatives
■post-gastric surgery malabsorption
■systemic diseases associated with malabsorption: thyrotoxicosis,
hypothyroidism, Addison’s disease, diabetes with autonomic neu-
ropathy, systemic sclerosis
Free download pdf