Fatigue as an Extra-Intestinal Manifestation of Celiac Disease: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Quality Assessment
3.2. Outline of the Included Papers
3.3. Definition and Measurement of Fatigue
3.4. Prevalence of Fatigue and Its Associations
3.5. Interventions to Alleviate Fatigue
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Fatigue | Coeliac Disease |
---|---|
Fatigue (MeSH) | Coeliac disease |
Mental fatigue | |
Chronic fatigue | |
Tiredness | |
Exhaustion | |
Weariness | |
Vitality | |
Asthenia | |
Low energy |
Study (Ref. No.) | Study Population and Setting | Study Design and Participants | Questionnaires Measuring Fatigue | Strengths and Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Häuser et al., 2006 [10] | A subgroup of members (1000/18,355) from the German Coeliac Society (GZG) ≥18 years was invited to participate Every 18th person on the membership list was invited in order to ensure a geographically representative sample Normative data were collected from the handbooks of the SF-36, GBB-24 and HADS-D Exclusion criteria: <18 years of age | Cross-sectional design Available for analyses: n = 446 | SF-36 (Vitality subscale) GBB-24 (Fatigue subscale) | L: Fatigue not specified as aim, merely reported as parts of the questionnaire results L: No definition of fatigue L: Sample consisting of members of a patient society only L: Low response rate S: Normative data for comparison L: Self-reported information on comorbidity L: Single centre study S: Validated instruments used L: Coeliac disease diagnosis self-reported only |
Siniscalchi et al., 2005 [11] | Caucation adults ≥18 years of age from Campania, Italy, were consecutively recruited from an outpatient clinic Participants divided into two groups (Group 1: Patients on gluten containing diet, Group 2: Patients on gluten-free diet) Control group consisted of volunteers recruited from medical an non-medical hospital staff Exclusion criteria: <18 years of age, lack of informed consent, major psychiatric disease, active thyroid gland disease | Cross-sectional design Coeliac disease: n = 130 Control group: n = 80 | CFS FSS VAS | S: Definition of fatigue. L: Inadequate language L: Groups not comparable due to differences in BMI, Ferritin, Haemoglobin L: No evidence of appropriate matching of groups L: Inadequate statistical control for differences between groups L: Methods used to collect socio-demographic and clinical data is lacking L: Unclear presentation of results L: Procedure for questionnaire handling insufficiently described L: Lack of information about validity and reliability on the study questionnaires, both in Italian and in the target group L: No clear identification and control of potential confounding factors L: Data not presented in line with study aims |
Jordá et al., 2010 [12] | Patients with celiac disease seen between March 2008 and April 2009 were prospectively invited to participate in the study Included patients stratified in two groups (Group 1: Following gluten-free diet, Group 2: Untreated) | Cross-sectional study n = 51 Group 1: n = 38 Group 2: n = 13 | D-FIS | L: No definition of fatigue. S: Validated fatigue questionnaire used L: Small sample and small subgroups L: Lack of information on recruitment procedure L: Lack of information concerning the collection of socio-demographic and clinical data L: No information on ethical approval L: No information about response rate or number of patients approached for inclusion L: Characteristics differ between groups |
Ciacci et al., 2007 [13] | Patients with CD screened for inclusion at the Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Federico II University—Naples, Italy6 0 patients randomized following a 30-day gluten-free diet | Randomized, double blind, parallel study n = 60 (l-Carnitine group n = 30, placebo n = 30) | Scott-Huskisson VAS VSA SF-36 (Vitality subscale) | S: Definition of fatigue S: Randomized groups S: Allocation concealment S: Clear definition of coeliac disease L: Large number of participants did not complete study (n = 13 (22%)) L: Single centre L: Lack of calculation of effect size L: No information on validity/reliability of fatigue questionnaires |
Zingone et al., 2010 [14] | Adult coeliac disease patients consecutively recruited from September 2009 to March 2010 from Frederico II University (Naples, Italy) Participants divided into two groups (Group 1: Coeliac patients at diagnosis on gluten containing diet. Group 2: Coeliac patients at follow up on gluten-free diet) Gender- and age-matched control group Inclusion criteria: Informed consent, 19–60 years Exclusion criteria: Major psychiatric disease, cancer, pregnancy or children blow 3 years of age | Case Control study Group 1: n = 30 Group 2: n = 30 Control group: n = 30 | Fatigue-VAS | L: Fatigue not specified as aim, merely reported as parts of the questionnaire results. L: No definition of fatigue L: No information about response rate or number of patients approached for inclusion L: Large numeric differences in characteristics between coeliac groups L: No control for confounding variables S: Gender- and age-matched controls |
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Jelsness-Jørgensen, L.-P.; Bernklev, T.; Lundin, K.E.A. Fatigue as an Extra-Intestinal Manifestation of Celiac Disease: A Systematic Review. Nutrients 2018, 10, 1652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10111652
Jelsness-Jørgensen L-P, Bernklev T, Lundin KEA. Fatigue as an Extra-Intestinal Manifestation of Celiac Disease: A Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2018; 10(11):1652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10111652
Chicago/Turabian StyleJelsness-Jørgensen, Lars-Petter, Tomm Bernklev, and Knut E. A. Lundin. 2018. "Fatigue as an Extra-Intestinal Manifestation of Celiac Disease: A Systematic Review" Nutrients 10, no. 11: 1652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10111652