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. 1975 Mar 1;1(5956):486–488. doi: 10.1136/bmj.1.5956.486

Detection of continuing gluten ingestion in treated coeliac patients.

P G Baker, R E Barry, A E Read
PMCID: PMC1672594  PMID: 1125587

Abstract

To assess the incidence and effects of continuing gluten ingestion in coeliac disease 51 adult coeliac patients were studied after four to 132 (mean 63) months on a prescribed gluten-free diet. Each patient completed a prospective dietary questionnaire, underwent a repeat jejunal biopsy, and gave serum for gluten antibody estimation. Altogether 65% of patients were still ingesting gluten, often inadvertently. Direct questioning on dietary habits had failed to uncover most of this consumption. The gluten antibody test proved a useful screening test for detecting continuing gluten ingestion and patients with both persistent subtotal villous atrophy and gluten antibodies were almost certain to be taking large amounts ( more than 2 g/day). The presence of persistent partial villous atrophy was found, however, to be an unreliable guide to gluten intake.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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