Celiac disease and its effect on human reproduction: a review

The Journal of Reproductive Medicine, 55(1-2), 3-8

Source

Abstract

Celiac disease is an intestinal inflammatory disease that is triggered by gluten in the diet. Patients present with a wide array of symptoms due to malabsorption that include diarrhea, abdominal pain, bloating and weight loss. In women, this disease may have implications on menstrual and reproductive health. The symptom complex includes delayed menarche, early menopause, secondary amenorrhea, infertility, recurrent miscarriages and intrauterine growth restriction. These women benefit from early diagnosis and treatment. Therefore, celiac disease should be considered and screening tests performed on women presenting with menstrual and reproductive problems and treated accordingly. The objective of this article is to review the current literature on celiac disease and its association with the above-mentioned disorders.

Topics

celiac disease infertility recurrent miscarriage review, celiac disease reproductive health menstrual disorders, gluten sensitivity delayed menarche early menopause amenorrhea, celiac disease intrauterine growth restriction pregnancy complications, gluten free diet fertility improvement women, malabsorption infertility secondary amenorrhea celiac screening, autoimmune disease reproductive failure celiac disease, celiac disease screening unexplained infertility women, Soni Badawy celiac disease human reproduction review, intestinal inflammatory disease menstrual cycle disruption

Cite this article

Soni, S., & Badawy, S. Z. (2010). Celiac disease and its effect on human reproduction: a review. *The Journal of reproductive medicine*, *55*(1-2), 3-8.

Related articles