TY - JOUR T1 - Clinical guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of celiac disease in Mexico JO - Revista de Gastroenterología de México T2 - AU - Remes-Troche,J.M. AU - Uscanga-Domínguez,L.F. AU - Aceves-Tavares,R.G. AU - Calderón de la Barca,A.M. AU - Carmona-Sánchez,R.I. AU - Cerda-Contreras,E. AU - Coss-Adame,E. AU - Icaza-Chávez,M.E. AU - Lopéz-Colombo,A. AU - Milke-García,M.P. AU - Morales-Arámbula,M. AU - Peláez-Luna,M. AU - Ramos Martínez,P. AU - Sánchez-Sosa,S. AU - Treviño-Mejía,M.C. AU - Vázquez-Frías,R. AU - Worona-Dibner,L.B. AU - Zamora-Nava,L.E. AU - Rubio-Tapia,A. SN - 2255534X M3 - 10.1016/j.rgmxen.2018.09.007 DO - 10.1016/j.rgmxen.2018.09.007 UR - http://revistagastroenterologiamexico.org/en-clinical-guidelines-on-diagnosis-treatment-articulo-S2255534X18301245 AB - Celiac disease, celiac sprue, or gluten-sensitive enteropathy, is a generalized autoimmune disease characterized by chronic inflammation and atrophy of the small bowel mucosa. It is caused by dietary exposure to gluten and affects genetically predisposed individuals. In Mexico, at least 800,000 are estimated to possibly have the disease, prompting the Asociación Mexicana de Gastroenterología to summon a multidisciplinary group of experts to develop the “Clinical guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of celiac disease in Mexico” and establish recommendations for the medical community, its patients, and the general population. The participating medical professionals were divided into three working groups and were given the selected bibliographic material by the coordinators (ART, LUD, JMRT), who proposed the statements that were discussed and voted upon in three sessions: two voting rounds were carried out electronically and one at a face-to-face meeting. Thirty-nine statements were accepted, and once approved, were developed and revised by the coordinators, and their final version was approved by all the participants. It was emphasized in the document that epidemiology and risk factors associated with celiac disease (first-degree relatives, autoimmune diseases, high-risk populations) in Mexico are similar to those described in other parts of the world. Standards for diagnosing the disease and its appropriate treatment in the Mexican patient were established. The guidelines also highlighted the fact that a strict gluten-free diet is essential only in persons with confirmed celiac disease, and that the role of gluten is still a subject of debate in relation to nonceliac, gluten-sensitive patients. ER -