Sentences with phrase «associated with coeliac disease»

If your beneficial bacteria are imbalanced, then you have a condition called Dysbiosis (related research article: Intestinal dysbiosis and reduced immunoglobulin - coated bacteria associated with coeliac disease in children).
SAL is currently chaired by Prof Christian Scerri, a specialist on the genetics associated with coeliac disease at the University of Malta.
Cancers associated with coeliac disease are small bowel cancer, small bowel lymphoma and Hodgkin lymphoma.

Not exact matches

The exact cause of dermatitis herpetiformis isn't known, but, as with coeliac disease, it's associated with gluten.
For the infant, breastfeeding is associated with a reduction in infectious illness (Cunningham et al., 1991), allergic manifestations in infants at risk (Saarinen and Kajosarri, 1995), diabetes (Mayer et al., 1988), Crohns disease (Rigas et al., 1993), coeliac disease (Challacombe et al., 1997) and ulcerative colitis (Koletzko et al., 1991), and may encourage mother — child attachment and bonding (Fergusson and Woodward, 1999).
An increased diversity is often associated with unstable or with unusual bacterial networks; in children with coeliac disease or adults with colorectal cancer an abnormally high microbial diversity is found.
There is growing evidence that dysbiosis is associated with the development of numerous disorders ranging from intestinal disorders (such as inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome and coeliac disease) to the likes of allergies, asthma, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease and obesity.
* Note that NCGS is not associated with the same significant, harmful degree of destruction of the intestinal villi as occurs in coeliac disease (in coeliac disease, the body actually attacks itself and causes serious damage to the small intestine when gluten is consumed).
Based on an analysis of bowel symptoms recorded using the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale, researchers reported that despite the use of a gluten free diet — universally indicated for coeliac disease (CD)-- a proportion of their cohort still presented with «persistent symptoms» and it is within this cohort they were aiming to see whether: «abnormal intestinal microbiota may be associated with persisting gastrointestinal symptoms in treated celiac disease patients... [found] higher relative abundance of Proteobacteria and a lower abundance of Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes.»
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