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Active clinical trials for "Celiac Disease"

Results 191-200 of 264

Can Celiac Disease Affect Ovarian Function in Adolescent?

Celiac DiseaseOvarian Failure

This case-control multicentre trial was performed from January 1, 2017, to May 31, 2018, in University of Health Sciences Bakirkoy Dr. Sadi Konuk Training and Research Hospital and Hitit University Hospital. Adolescents who were in compliance with the inclusion criteria were called by telephone for blood collection and ultrasound on the 3rd day of menstruation after approval from local ethical registration. On days 2-5 of the menstrual cycle, level of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), estradiol (E2), prolactin (PRL), and AMH were measured from venous blood samples in both groups. Antral Follicle Counts (AFCs) and ovarian volumes were determined on the same day.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Serological Identification of Celiac Disease in Kids

Celiac Disease in ChildrenPediatric Disorder3 more

The investigators aim to examine the feasibility of incorporating serological celiac disease (CD) screening into general pediatric outpatient clinics in Sweden and through structured monitoring examine the effects of diagnosing and treating screening-detected CD. Screening will be tailored to general pediatric outpatient clinics in the Gothenburg metropolitan area with the goal to screen 1000 children over four months. Screening for CD will be carried out by measuring tissue transglutaminase autoantibodies (TGA) in blood. Children who are persistently TGA positive will be enrolled into a 6-12-month follow-up protocol responsible for diagnosing CD, installation of gluten-free diet and to assess their short-term impact upon the child's wellbeing. Other components to assess include (I) the feasibility to incorporate CD screening into busy pediatric practices; (II) parental/child interest in, and satisfaction with, participating in a CD screening program and (III) identifying key considerations for a possible scaled-up, broad-based, CD screening.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Gluten Challenge Study in Celiac Disease Participants (MK-0000-402)

Celiac Disease

This is a gluten challenge study to characterize peripheral blood and intestinal gluten specific cluster of differentiation 4 glycoprotein (CD4+) thymus lymphocyte (T cell) subsets in participants with Celiac Disease

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Immune Response in Celiac Disease on In-vitro Gluten Challenge

Celiac Disease

The main purpose of this study is to see how cells taken from the lining of the intestine behave in the laboratory with exposure to gluten and other substances that act on the immune system. The cells lining the intestine of a person with celiac disease should be different than a person without celiac disease. The study doctors would like to see how the cells react after coming in contact with gluten and if substances that act on the immune system can prevent gluten related inflammation. Examples of these substances include steroids. The cells should produce chemicals of their own in response to the gluten. These other chemicals will be measured and the results compared between those with: celiac disease that does not respond to a gluten-free diet (refractory celiac disease) celiac disease which is controlled by a gluten-free diet uncontrolled celiac disease (either newly diagnosed with celiac disease or not on a gluten-free diet gluten-sensitivity disorders other than celiac disease.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Detection of Immunotoxic Gluten Peptides in Feces

Celiac Disease

The purpose of this study is to monitor of gluten-free diet compliance in celiac patients by assessment of gliadin 33-mer equivalent epitopes in feces.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Celiac Disease Prevention

Celiac Disease

Celiac disease is an autoimmune disease induced by wheat gluten. Destruction of epithelial cells and microvilli on gut mucosa is causing a "flat mucosa" and an absorption defect. The diagnosis is based on typical microscopical finding in biopsy specimens but serum antibodies to tissue transglutaminase and certain gliadin peptides are strongly associated with the pathology. Severe diarrhoea associated with growth disturbance in infancy was historically characterising the disease but is nowadays rare. Clinically more mild forms including silent disease are very common. Studies based on antibody screening and biopsies done in autoantibody positive subjects have confirmed a frequency of about 1-2% in adult population. Undiagnosed disease is associated with deficiencies of nutrients and vitamins leading to various chronic symptoms like anaemia, osteoporosis and general fatigue. It has also been recently found that undiagnosed celiac disease may be associated with general underachievement in society probably associated with common psychological symptoms like fatigue and depression during the adolescence. The disease is treated by complete elimination of wheat, rye and barley in the diet, which is laborious and causing considerable extra costs in nutrition. Much progress has been recently made in understanding of the genetic background and immune markers associated with the disease as well as in understanding those patterns of gluten introduction in infancy, which might be connected to a high disease risk. Our aim in this study is in the first phase to identify children at high genetic risk (around 10%) and in a follow-up study to define: Are the age, dose of gluten and presence of simultaneous breast feeding at the introduction of gluten associated with the risk of celiac disease? Is it possible to decrease the frequency of celiac disease by nutritional counselling? Is it possible to predict development of celiac disease by immunological tests before the development of mucosal lesion If we can confirm, that optimising the conditions at the introduction of wheat gluten in infancy diet significantly reduces the disease incidence, will this have an important effect on the nutritional recommendations concerning the diet in infancy. Combining genetic screening and immunological tests might also offer a way to reduce the frequency of celiac disease and help in early diagnosis and organisation of an adequate treatment

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Nutritional Intake and Bone Health in Celiac Disease

Celiac Disease

Celiac disease leads to malnutrition and secondary conditions including osteoporosis. The dietary habits of adults with untreated, undiagnosed celiac disease has not yet been observed, but presents a critical piece in understanding the effects of the disease on bone health. Objective was to evaluate differences in nutritional intake of calcium, vitamin D, and phosphorus; serologic indices of these nutrients; and bone health among adults with and without celiac disease. Cross-sectional data from What We Eat in America (WWEIA) and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2009-14 was analyzed.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Intestinal Transglutaminase Antibodies in Celiac Disease Diagnosis

Celiac Disease

Celiac disease (CD) is a systemic autoimmune gluten-dependent enteropathy in subjects with HLA DQ2/8. CD prevalence is more than 1% with a progression to 2% in adulthood. Among the group at risk such as first-degree relatives, subjects with autoimmune diseases (eg type 1 diabetes) or with syndromes (Down's disease, Turner) the prevalence reaches 5-8%. Recently, in pediatrics CD diagnostic criteria have been modified and the intestinal biopsy can be omitted in presence of a specific clinical and laboratory picture. In the remaining pediatric cases and in all adult patients, the biopsy is fundamental for the diagnosis. The clinical manifestation of CD not always depends on the enteropathy and on the related symptoms, but it can be characterized by extra-intestinal symptoms (eg chronic fatigue, anemia, arthralgia, cerebellar ataxia, alterations of dental enamel) that often hamper a rapid CD recognition delaying the diagnosis especially in adults. Symptoms are not always related to intestinal injury and may be present even when intestinal mucosa is normal. This condition is known as potential CD in which serum IgA anti-transglutaminase antibodies (anti-ttg) are generally positive at low concentrations (eg higher 2-3 times than the cut-off) or positive occasionally. In this clinical context, the gluten-free diet is an effective therapy able to improve the clinical picture and to stop the anti-ttg production. Recent observations, especially in pediatric field, have shown that in potential CD the immunological analysis of intestinal biopsies is characterized by the presence of anti-ttg deposits in the intestinal mucosa which predict the development of intestinal atrophy in a time span of 3- 5 years. Furthermore, these deposits disappear with the diet-therapy. In pediatric field, the diagnostic specificity of mucosal anti-ttg (anti-ttg-m) is between 95-98%, while the sensitivity is 100%. In adults, anti-ttg-m show 100% sensitivity in typical celiac disease (characterized by high serum anti-ttg concentrations and intestinal mucosa atrophy), while no results are available about potential celiac disease. Moreover, in adults data about the specificity of anti-ttg-m in infectious, oncological and inflammatory diseases of the gastro-intestinal tract are not available. The main study objectives are to evaluate anti-ttg-m sensitivity in patients with typical celiac disease and anti-ttg-m specificity in patients with oncological and inflammatory bowel diseases.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Gluten-free Oats and Gastrointestinal Health in Coeliac Disease, Part 2

Unidentified Gastrointestinal Symptoms Following Gluten-free Oats Consumption

The research aims to investigate the effects of gluten-free oats to the gastrointestinal health in celiac disease patients and healthy subjects. The effects of gluten-free oats on the several intestinal parameters, on the composition of the gut microbiota as well as on the metabolic profile of celiac patients and healthy controls will be studied. The study is divided into two parts. Part 1 will be conducted as a double-blind, randomized and placebo-controlled cross-over study. Healthy subjects will be recruited to the study. The aim is to recruit 15 participants for the part 1. The study will be conducted with a cross-over setting, where the subjects will go through exposure meals and SmartPill ingestion three times (two different oat products and placebo) in a randomized order. The study meals are identical in appearance and fiber content. After consuming the meal subjects will ingest the SmartPill capsule, which will send data on intestinal pH, pressure and temperature to the external portable device. Before and during the passage of capsule the subjects will fill a symptom and food diary. The capsule will exit the body in 1 to 3 days and the data collected by the external device will be collected and analyzed. Before the oat/placebo exposure the subjects will give a fecal and a blood sample. In addition, 36 hours urine samples will be collected. In part 2 celiac disease patients, non-celiac gluten sensitive subjects and healthy controls will be recruited and they will be divided into four groups: oat-avoiding celiacs (1), oat-consuming celiacs (2), non-celiac gluten sensitive subjects (3) and healthy controls (4). Recruiting aim for each group is 15 subjects. In addition to dietary data, a blood, and a fecal sample will be collected from the subjects. The gut microbiota will be analyzed from the fecal samples. The metabolic products will be analyzed from the fecal, urine and blood samples. The gut microbiota composition will be analyzed with next-generation DNA sequencing techniques.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Effects of Gluten Digestion With ALV003

Celiac Disease

This is a Phase 0, Double-blind study that will assess the effect of in vitro treatment of gluten with ALV003 or with placebo when ingested by CD Subjects.

Completed13 enrollment criteria
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