Incidence of small-intestinal mucosal abnormalities and of clinical coeliac disease in the relatives of children with coeliac disease
Open Access
- 1 October 1971
- Vol. 12 (10) , 789-793
- https://doi.org/10.1136/gut.12.10.789
Abstract
Evidence is presented of a higher than normal incidence both of clinical coeliac disease and of small-intestinal mucosal abnormalities in relatives of children with coeliac disease. In such relatives the incidence of mucosal abnormality may differ from the incidence of clinical coeliac disease. The data show an absence of any simple Mendelian pattern of inheritance: in place of the hypothesis that inheritance is through a dominant gene of reduced penetrance, it is argued that the pathogenesis of coeliac disease is multifactorial, the genetic basis of susceptibility being polygenic and interacting with environmental factors. On this hypothesis the relative contributions of inheritance and environment to liability to the clinical condition are estimated, the genetic component being 45% ± 9. Environmental factors appear more important in the development of mucosal abnormality.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The enterocyte in coeliac disease.BMJ, 1970
- Small intestinal mucosal abnormalities in relatives of patients with dermatitis herpetiformisGut, 1970
- Inheritance of coeliac disease.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1969
- Small Intestine in PsoriasisBMJ, 1967
- A STUDY OF PROXIMAL AND DISTAL INTESTINAL STRUCTURE AND ABSORPTIVE FUNCTION IN IDIOPATHIC STEATORRHOEA1967
- Appearances of the jejunal mucosa in acute tropical sprue in Singapore.Gut, 1966
- Studies of the Familial Nature of Celiac Sprue Using Biopsy of the Small IntestineNew England Journal of Medicine, 1965
- Comparison of jejunal mucosa in post-gastrectomy states, idiopathic steatorrhoea, and controls using the dissecting microscope and conventional histological methodsGut, 1964
- THE INHERITANCE OF COELIAC DISEASEAnnals of Human Genetics, 1959
- Heredity, maternal age, and birth order in the etiology of celiac disease.1951