4.0 Article

Ultrastructural Aspects of Enterocyte Defects in Infancy and Childhood

Journal

ULTRASTRUCTURAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 3, Pages 117-125

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.3109/01913121003648410

Keywords

celiac disease; congenital defects of glycosylation; electron microscopy; enterocyte defects; lymphangectasia; malabsorption syndromes; microvillus inclusion disease; steatorrhea

Funding

  1. Dan David Foundation
  2. Milman Fund for Pediatric Research

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Although there has been substantial progress in the identification of diarrheal diseases in infancy and childhood, electron microscopy may be still required for establishing diagnosis, staging, and response to therapy. This review describes severe conditions in which histopathologic examination alone cannot provide a firm diagnosis needed for therapeutic decisions. Microvillus inclusion disease, in its several variants, typifies this category. In certain forms of congenital disorders of glycosylation with gastrointestinal involvement, electron microscopic diagnosis is helpful. Among disorders due to abnormal immune-mediated reactions, celiac disease and cow's milk protein intolerance show fine structural changes of both diagnostic and staging value. Likewise, protein-losing enteropathies, including lymphangectasia, reveal information on the nature and extent of intestinal involvement.

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