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Corneal confocal microscopy demonstrates minimal evidence of distal neuropathy in children with celiac disease

Version 2 2024-12-12, 07:40
Version 1 2024-12-04, 08:43
journal contribution
revised on 2024-12-12, 07:40 and posted on 2024-12-12, 07:40 authored by Hoda Gad, Saras Saraswathi, Bara Al-Jarrah, Ioannis N. Petropoulos, Georgios Ponirakis, Adnan Khan, Parul Singh, Souhaila Al Khodor, Mamoun Elawad, Wesam Almasri, Hatim Abdelrahman, Khalid Hussain, Mohamed A. Hendaus, Fatma Al-Mudahka, Khaled Abouhazima, Paraic McGrogan, Rayaz A. Malik, Anthony K. Akobeng

Objectives

The aim of this study was to utilise corneal confocal microscopy to quantify corneal nerve morphology and establish the presence of sub-clinical small fibre damage and peripheral neuropathy in children with celiac disease.

Methods

This is a cross-sectional cohort study of twenty children with celiac disease and 20 healthy controls who underwent clinical and laboratory assessments and corneal confocal microscopy. Corneal nerve fiber density (no.mm2), corneal nerve branch density (no.mm2), corneal nerve fiber length (mm.mm2), corneal nerve fiber tortuosity and inferior whorl length (mm.mm2) were quantified manually.

Results

Corneal nerve fiber density (34.7±8.6 vs. 32.9±8.6; P = 0.5), corneal nerve branch density (47.2±24.5 vs. 47.3±20.0; P = 0.1) and corneal nerve fiber length (20.0±5.1 vs. 19.5±4.5; P = 0.8) did not differ between children with celiac disease and healthy controls. Corneal nerve fiber tortuosity (11.4±1.9 vs 13.5±3.0; P = 0.01) was significantly lower and inferior whorl length (20.0±5.5 vs 23.0±3.8; P = 0.06) showed a non-significant reduction in children with celiac disease compared to healthy controls. Inferior whorl length correlated significantly with corneal nerve fiber density (P = 0.005), corneal nerve branch density (P = 0.04), and corneal nerve fiber length (P = 0.002).

Conclusion

Corneal confocal microscopy demonstrates minimal evidence of neuropathy in children with celiac disease.

Other Information

Published in: PLOS ONE
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
See article on publisher's website: https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238859

Funding

Open Access funding provided by the Qatar National Library.

History

Language

  • English

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Publication Year

  • 2020

License statement

This Item is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Institution affiliated with

  • Weill Cornell Medicine - Qatar
  • Sidra Medicine

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