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European Society for the Study of Coeliac Disease (ESsCD) guideline for coeliac disease and other gluten-related disorders.

TLDR
The treatment for CD is primarily a gluten-free diet (GFD), which requires significant patient education, motivation and follow-up, and less well-defined conditions such as non-coeliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS), gluten-sensitive neurological manifestations, such as ataxia, have been addressed.
Abstract
This guideline presents recommendations for the management of coeliac disease (CD) and other gluten-related disorders both in adults and children. There has been a substantial increase in the prevalence of CD over the last 50 years and many patients remain undiagnosed. Diagnostic testing, including serology and biopsy, should be performed on a gluten-containing diet. The diagnosis of CD is based on a combination of clinical, serological and histopathological data. In a group of children the diagnosis may be made without biopsy if strict criteria are available. The treatment for CD is primarily a gluten-free diet (GFD), which requires significant patient education, motivation and follow-up. Slow-responsiveness occurs frequently, particularly in those diagnosed in adulthood. Persistent or recurring symptoms necessitate a review of the original diagnosis, exclude alternative diagnoses, confirm dietary adherence (dietary review and serology) and follow-up biopsy. In addition, evaluation to exclude complications of CD, such as refractory CD or lymphoma, should be performed. The guideline also deals with other gluten-related disorders, such as dermatitis herpetiformis, which is a cutaneous manifestation of CD characterized by granular IgA deposits in the dermal papillae. The skin lesions clear with gluten withdrawal. Also, less well-defined conditions such as non-coeliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS) and gluten-sensitive neurological manifestations, such as ataxia, have been addressed. Newer therapeutic modalities for CD are being studied in clinical trials but are not yet approved for use in practice.

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Coeliac disease.

TL;DR: The only effective treatment for coeliac disease is a lifelong strict gluten-free diet; however, the diet is restrictive and gluten is difficult to avoid.
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Pathogenesis of Celiac Disease and Other Gluten Related Disorders in Wheat and Strategies for Mitigating Them.

TL;DR: Following a life-long gluten-free diet by celiac disease and non-celiac gluten-sensitivity patients is very challenging as none of wheat cultivar or related species stands safe for consumption.
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Intestinal Barrier Function in Gluten-Related Disorders

TL;DR: The mucosal barrier of the small intestine is summarized, the aspects of barrier dysfunction observed in all three gluten-related disorders are summarized and literature data is reviewed in favor of a primary involvement of the epithelial barrier in the development of celiac disease and non-celiac wheat sensitivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

COVID-19 pandemic perception in adults with celiac disease: an impulse to implement the use of telemedicine.

TL;DR: The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted a proportion of patients with CeD; in particular, women, elderly patients, patients with other comorbidities and females, and CeD patients were happy with remote consultations and explicitly asked to have them.
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