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Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease

Primary enteropathies of infancy comprise of epithelial defects including microvillus inclusion disease, tufting enteropathy, and enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis and autoimmune enteropathies. The diseases in this group cause severe chronic (>2-3 weeks) diarrhoea starting in the first weeks of lif...

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Autores principales: Kozan, Eda Nur, Tuna Kırsaçlıoğlu, Ceyda, Kuloğlu, Zarife, Kansu, Aydan, Savas, Berna, Ensari, Arzu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10404822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37554751
http://dx.doi.org/10.22037/ghfbb.v16i2.2735
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author Kozan, Eda Nur
Tuna Kırsaçlıoğlu, Ceyda
Kuloğlu, Zarife
Kansu, Aydan
Savas, Berna
Ensari, Arzu
author_facet Kozan, Eda Nur
Tuna Kırsaçlıoğlu, Ceyda
Kuloğlu, Zarife
Kansu, Aydan
Savas, Berna
Ensari, Arzu
author_sort Kozan, Eda Nur
collection PubMed
description Primary enteropathies of infancy comprise of epithelial defects including microvillus inclusion disease, tufting enteropathy, and enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis and autoimmune enteropathies. The diseases in this group cause severe chronic (>2-3 weeks) diarrhoea starting in the first weeks of life and resulting in failure to thrive in the infant. Duodenal biopsies show moderate villous shortening together with crypt hyperplasia which are the main features causing resemblance to coeliac disease. We, hereby, report a term-born male infant of consanguineous parents. His two siblings died during infancy. He developed watery, urine-like diarrhea on the 3rd day of his life. On the postnatal 6th day he weighed 2750 grams, became dehydrated and had metabolic acidosis. Upper GI endoscopy performed on the postnatal 20th day appeared normal. Light microscopic examination of the duodenal biopsy showed moderate villous blunting, with mildly increased inflammatory cells in the lamina propria or and intraepithelial lymphocytosis. Enterocytes at the villous tips showed an irregular vacuolated appearance in the apical cytoplasm with patchy absence of the brush border demonstared by PAS and CD10. Electron microscopy revealed intracytoplasmic inclusions that were lined by intact microvilli in the apical cytoplasm of enterocytes. As he was dependent on TPN and aggressive intravenous fluid replacement he was hospitalized throughout his life. He died when he was 3 years and 4 months old. Paediatric coeliac disease is in the differential diagnosis of primary enteropathies of childhood. The differentiation lies on duodenal biopsy interpretation together with genetic analysis to detect the underlying genetic defect in childhood enteropathies.
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spelling pubmed-104048222023-08-08 Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease Kozan, Eda Nur Tuna Kırsaçlıoğlu, Ceyda Kuloğlu, Zarife Kansu, Aydan Savas, Berna Ensari, Arzu Gastroenterol Hepatol Bed Bench Article Primary enteropathies of infancy comprise of epithelial defects including microvillus inclusion disease, tufting enteropathy, and enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis and autoimmune enteropathies. The diseases in this group cause severe chronic (>2-3 weeks) diarrhoea starting in the first weeks of life and resulting in failure to thrive in the infant. Duodenal biopsies show moderate villous shortening together with crypt hyperplasia which are the main features causing resemblance to coeliac disease. We, hereby, report a term-born male infant of consanguineous parents. His two siblings died during infancy. He developed watery, urine-like diarrhea on the 3rd day of his life. On the postnatal 6th day he weighed 2750 grams, became dehydrated and had metabolic acidosis. Upper GI endoscopy performed on the postnatal 20th day appeared normal. Light microscopic examination of the duodenal biopsy showed moderate villous blunting, with mildly increased inflammatory cells in the lamina propria or and intraepithelial lymphocytosis. Enterocytes at the villous tips showed an irregular vacuolated appearance in the apical cytoplasm with patchy absence of the brush border demonstared by PAS and CD10. Electron microscopy revealed intracytoplasmic inclusions that were lined by intact microvilli in the apical cytoplasm of enterocytes. As he was dependent on TPN and aggressive intravenous fluid replacement he was hospitalized throughout his life. He died when he was 3 years and 4 months old. Paediatric coeliac disease is in the differential diagnosis of primary enteropathies of childhood. The differentiation lies on duodenal biopsy interpretation together with genetic analysis to detect the underlying genetic defect in childhood enteropathies. Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2023 /pmc/articles/PMC10404822/ /pubmed/37554751 http://dx.doi.org/10.22037/ghfbb.v16i2.2735 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open-access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits others to copy and redistribute the material just in noncommercial usages, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Kozan, Eda Nur
Tuna Kırsaçlıoğlu, Ceyda
Kuloğlu, Zarife
Kansu, Aydan
Savas, Berna
Ensari, Arzu
Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
title Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
title_full Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
title_fullStr Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
title_full_unstemmed Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
title_short Not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! Report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
title_sort not all enteropathies are coeliac disease! report of an infant with microvillus inclusion disease
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10404822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37554751
http://dx.doi.org/10.22037/ghfbb.v16i2.2735
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