View clinical trials related to Celiac Sprue.
Filter by:This is a longitudinal observational study on patients with gastrointestinal and related disease. The study will be conducted for at least 10 years, following each participant over time, as they either go through relapses and remissions, or progression of their disease.
One in 100 people suffers from coeliac disease. It affects the lining of the bowel and causes many symptoms such as diarrhoea, wind, stomach pain, constipation and nausea. The only treatment so far is a strict glutenfree diet for life which reverses the bowel damage and often improves symptoms. Up to 25% of patients however may have persistent symptoms despite the gluten free diet but the reasons for this are not clear. This research aims to help us understand how the gluten free diet works. Investigators will use medical imaging (magnetic resonance imaging or MRI) to measure the volumes of fluid in the small bowel, the size of the large bowel and the time it takes for foods to go through the entire bowel in patients who have just been diagnosed with coeliac disease by their hospital doctor. Investigators will also carry out a breath test and collect a stool sample for basic analysis of the stool bacteria. Investigators will also collect questionnaires about their feelings and their bowel habits and will try to see how the MRI measurements relate to the patients' symptoms. Investigators will observe how all these measures change after one year of the gluten free diet that doctors will have prescribed as part of the coeliac patients' standard care. As such there is no dietary intervention in this study, investigators will simply study changes in the patients due to their standard treatment. Investigators will also look at a matched group of healthy volunteers to gather a likely reference range of the measurements. This research will be carried out in Nottingham with the help of the specialist coeliac clinics and it will last 3 years. There is a dedicated Coeliac Patient Public Involvement group who have helped plan this study.
Background: - Celiac disease is a condition where the immune system attacks the cells of the small intestine. The intestine becomes inflamed and cannot digest food properly. The disease most often causes a reaction to foods that contain gluten. Most people can treat celiac disease with a gluten-free diet. However, some people have digestion problems even on a gluten-free diet. Researchers want to try a new antibody therapy for celiac disease. The treatment may block the immune reaction that causes the disease. They will test this antibody in people who have celiac disease that has not responded to a gluten-free diet. Objectives: - To see if antibody therapy is a safe and effective treatment for celiac disease that has not responded to standard treatments. Eligibility: - Individuals at least 18 years of age who have been on a gluten-free diet for 6 to 12 months but still have symptoms of celiac disease. Design: - Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. Blood samples will be collected. These samples will help determine if the specific antibody treatment is likely to work. - Before the start of the study, participants will have a biopsy of the small intestine. - Participants will receive three doses of the study antibody as injections. These doses will be given 3 weeks apart. - Treatment will be monitored with blood tests and heart function tests. Participants will also have a second small intestine biopsy within a week after the last dose of the antibody.
The study evaluates whether hypothyroid patients requiring elevated doses of levothyroxine to maintain a euthyroid state are at increased risk of having celiac disease. It also attempts to determine if there is a threshold level of levothyroxine needed to maintain a euthyroid state in patients with hypothyroidism that should prompt serologic testing for celiac disease.
The objective of this study is to determine whether the finger tip images captured by the EPIC ClearView device, when analyzed via the ClearView software, produce a Response Scale that characterizes trends consistent with known diagnoses identified by medical doctors. Specifically, the investigators hypothesize that the organ system involving any of a series of known active diagnoses will be identified in the EPIC ClearView Response Scale report with the intention of providing potential triage capabilities.