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Detect the prevalence of celiac disease in children with unexplained short stature attended at Assiut University Children Hospital.
Full description
Short stature is a term applied to a child whose height is 2 standard deviations or more below the mean for children of that chronological age and sex , and ideally of the same racial - ethnic group.This corresponds to a height below 3rd centile .Short stature can be the result of normal growth variants e.g. familial or constitutional which are the most common causes in children below one or two years ,or it can be the result of chronic systemic disorders, endocrine disorders, genetic, chromosomal disorders, and skeletal dysplasia. Chronic malnutrition and chemotherapy can also result in short stature -Around 3-2.5% of the children worldwide are short.
The Egyptian Demographic and Health Survey of 2008 (EDHS 2008) revealed that the prevalence of stunting among children under 5 was 2%28.9, while that of the EDHS 2014 was found to be 21%
Worldwide, its prevalence is about 1% ,affecting females twice more than males.
Short stature is the most commonly encountered extra- intestinal manifestation of CD in children, being found in roughly one-third of all new pediatric celiac diagnoses.
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Inclusion criteria
(1) Children aged between 2-18 years with undetectable causes of short stature whose height was < -2 SDfor the ageandsexaccording to Z score growth references for Egyptianchildrenand adolescent growth reference and Control DiseaseCenter(CDC) charts. (2) Short children not previously screened for Celiac disease.
Exclusion criteria
Short children with demonstrable cause such as:
(1) Familial and constitutional short stature. (2) Chronic illness. (3) Disproportionate short stature. (4) Short stature of endocrinal origin (eg, growth hormone deficiency). (5) Turner syndrome. (6) Short stature with significant congenital anomalies. (7) Patients on gluten free diet.
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Central trial contact
Esraa Atef Shehataa; Shereen Mansour Galal, As.Professor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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