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Patients with celiac disease are at high risk of developing metabolic syndrome and fatty liver

Authors :
Ashish Agarwal
Alka Singh
Wajiha Mehtab
Vipin Gupta
Ashish Chauhan
Mahendra Singh Rajput
Namrata Singh
Vineet Ahuja
Govind K. Makharia
Source :
Intestinal Research, Vol 19, Iss 1, Pp 106-114 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Korean Association for the Study of Intestinal Diseases, 2021.

Abstract

Background/Aims Gluten-free diet has an excess of fats and simple sugars and puts patients with celiac disease at risk of metabolic complications including metabolic syndrome and fatty liver. We assessed prevalence of metabolic syndrome and fatty liver in two cohorts of celiac disease. Methods Study was done in 2 groups. In group 1, 54 treatment naïve patients with celiac disease were recruited. Of them, 44 returned after 1-year of gluten-free diet and were reassessed. In group 2, 130 celiac disease patients on gluten-free diet for ≥1 year were recruited. All patients were assessed for anthropometric and metabolic parameters and fatty liver. Metabolic syndrome was defined as per consensus definition for Asian Indians. Fatty liver was defined as controlled attenuation parameter value >263 decibels by FibroScan. Results In group 1, of 44 treatment naïve patients with celiac disease, metabolic syndrome was present in 5 patients (11.4%) at baseline and 9 (18.2%) after 1 year of gluten-free diet. Patients having fatty liver increased from 6 patients (14.3%) at baseline to 13 (29.5%) after 1year of gluten-free diet (P=0.002). In group 2, of 130 patients with celiac disease on gluten-free diet for a median duration of 4 years, 30 out of 114 (26.3%) and 30 out of 130 patients (23%) had metabolic syndrome and fatty liver, respectively. Conclusions Patients with celiac disease are at high risk of developing metabolic syndrome and fatty liver, which increases further with gluten-free diet. These patients should be assessed for nutritional and metabolic features and counseled about balanced diet and physical activity regularly.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15989100 and 22881956
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Intestinal Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7045ca4e558f4958b8d339fa9cca564b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2019.00136