1Šikl’s Department of Pathology, Charles University, Medical Faculty in Pilsen, Czech Republic
2Louis Pasteur University Hospital, Košice, Slovakia
3Medical Faculty Hospital, Pilsen, Czech Republic
4Cytopathos s.r.o., Bratislava, Slovakia
International Journal of Celiac Disease.
2014,
Vol. 2 No. 2, 70-75
DOI: 10.12691/ijcd-2-2-10
Copyright © 2014 Science and Education PublishingCite this paper: Marián Švajdler, Ondřej Daum, Boris Rychlý. Diagnosing Celiac Disease: Role of the Pathologists.
International Journal of Celiac Disease. 2014; 2(2):70-75. doi: 10.12691/ijcd-2-2-10.
Correspondence to: Marián Švajdler, Šikl’s Department of Pathology, Charles University, Medical Faculty in Pilsen, Czech Republic. Email:
svajdler@yahoo.comAbstract
Duodenal biopsy is an essential component in the diagnosis of celiac disease (CD). Although the classical findings of increased number of intraepithelial lymphocytes, crypt hyperplasia and villous atrophy are very characteristic, the diagnosis cannot be achieved on the basis of histopathology alone, as there are many entities that can mimic CD and a close collaboration of a pathologist and a clinician specialist is needed. In a patient with suspected CD, pathologist should describe essential histopathological findings and offer differential diagnosis when appropriate. The most important recent changes in the diagnostic criteria for CD include lower numbers of intraepithelial lymphocytes that are considered to be normal and recommendation to perform biopsies from the proximal part of the duodenum in addition to the distal duodenal biopsies.
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