A Gluten Free Diet in the Management of Epilepsy in People with Coeliac Disease or Gluten Sensitivity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Epilepsy
1.2. Ketogenic Diet in Management of Epilepsy
1.3. Gluten and Coeliac Disease
1.4. Non Coeliac Gluten Sensitivity
1.5. Association between Epilepsy and Coeliac Disease
2. Methods
3. Data Collection
- Non-English language papers
- Include participants with other neurological conditions
- Include other known antiepileptic intervention
- Participants with known cause epilepsy
- Non-reporting of compliance to GFD
- Participant characteristics: age, sex, number of participants
- Study characteristics: country, study design, controls, outcomes measured
- Seizure type
- Duration of GFD
- Method of measuring adherence to GFD
- Length of follow up
- Outcome results
4. Results
5. Discussion
5.1. Main Findings
- Gluten mediated toxicity;
- Gluten involved immune-induced cortical damage; and
- CD related malabsorption of nutrients.
5.2. Gluten Mediated Toxicity
5.3. Gluten Involved Immune-Mediated Mechanisms
5.4. Malabsorption
5.5. Timing of Commencement of GFD
5.6. GFD and AEDs
5.7. EEG
5.8. GFD and Multidisciplinary Team Management
5.9. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Location | Worldwide |
Language | English |
Population | No age restriction, people with a diagnosis of idiopathic epilepsy (irrespective of seizure type); people with seizure disorders and CD with seizure-related neurological abnormalities Animal studies/models investigating gluten and seizure/epileptiform activity EEG |
Intervention | Gluten-free diet |
Comparisons | No intervention |
Setting | No restriction |
Outcomes | Any of the following: Reduction in seizures Reduction in medication Reduction in EEG abnormalities Adverse reactions Cognitive or behavioural outcomes Quality of life outcomes |
Study design |
|
Study | Number of Participants on GFD | Method of Measuring Adherence to Gluten-Free Diet | Outcome Seizure Reduction | Outcome AED Reduction | EEG before GFD | EEG after GFD | Adverse Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arroyo 2002 | 24 | Patients described as compliant with diet in group 3 and implied for other patients Authors comment on patients who had not strictly followed the diet which indicates adherence was monitored | 11 patients (45.8%) on AED became seizure free before GFD Nine patients (37.5%) who were on AED became seizure free after introduction of GFD | Not documented | 15/32 normal | 20/32 normal | Four patients on an AED had uncontrolled seizures Three developed epileptic encephalopathy despite GFD |
Bashiri 2016 | 7 | Intestinal biopsy repeated 3 months after starting GFD | Six patients became seizure free One patient seizures controlled | AEDs discontinued in 6 patients AED reduced by half in 1 patient | n/a | n/a | None reported |
Berio 2013 | 12 | Groups differentiated good/poor compliance | n/a | n/a | Not measured | 5/6 normal with good compliance to GFD 5/6 abnormal with poor compliance | None reported |
Casciato 2015 | 10 | Serological and histological testing | Two patients non-compliant GFDOne patient lost at follow-up Of the remaining seven patients: Three patients became seizure free Three reduction in number of seizures One no change | Not reported | 10 abnormal | Not measured | None reported |
Gobbi 1992 | 29 20 followed up | Adherence assumed. Authors state patients were ‘prescribed’ a GFD | Four patients’ seizures decreased by more than 50% Six patients seizure free; Nine patients no change | Not reported | Four normal 25 abnormal | Not measured | One patient increased seizures >50% |
Hernandez 1998 | 4 | Monitored and reported Poor compliance noted | Patient 1: seizure frequency decreased by 30% Patient 2: seizure free Patient 3: seizure frequency decreased by 10% Patient 4: seizure frequency decreased by 50% | Not reported | Four abnormal | Not measured | None reported |
Isikay 2015 | 132 patients 99 controls | Notes ‘effective GFD’ for formerly diagnosed CD patients and ‘ineffective GFD’ for newly diagnosed CD patients | n/a | n/a | Four new patients abnormal 9.3% Two former patients abnormal 1.5% One control case abnormal 1% | All normal, including case control which spontaneously normalised | None reported |
Liccheta 2011 | 8 | Control visit interviews in the last 12 months to assess compliance | Five patients no clinical benefit One patient reduced seizure frequency One patient seizure free. One not F/U | Not reported | Eight abnormal | Not reported | None reported |
Parisi 2014 | 19 | Complete adherence confirmed by parents | n/a | n/a | Nine abnormal | One abnormal One unknown (parents refused follow-up EEG) Seven normal (77.7%) | None reported |
Sel 2017 | 5 | Adherence implied. Reported non-compliance in 1 patient | Three patients stopped AEDs One due to stop AEDs | Three patients stopped AEDs One due to stop AEDs | Four abnormal One normal | None reported | |
Volta 2002 | 3 | Monitored, recorded and reported in paper | Two patients improved, one patient not | n/a | n/a | n/a | None reported |
Study | Mean Age (Years) | Sex f/m | Mean Age at Seizure Onset (Years) | Seizure Type | Seizure Frequency | EEG | AEDs | Gastrointestinal Symptoms | Coeliac Disease |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arroyo 2002 | 11 | 22/10 | 6.13 | 31 partial One generalised tonic-clonic | Most patients: monthly or less Three patients daily | 19 normal 13 abnormal | Yes, all | Absent or rare at time of CD diagnosis but chronic diarrhoea in all cases, appearing at mean age 2.8 years, preceding seizure onset | Yes Biopsy proven |
Bashiri 2016 | 30.2 | 3/4 | 16.2 | 46% generalised tonic-clonic 38% complex partial | Three patients weekly Four patients monthly | Not measured | Yes, all | No | Yes IgA serum antibodiesBiopsy proven |
Berio 2013 | 10–44 | Not reported | No seizures | n/a | n/a | Five normal Six abnormal One not measured | n/a | Not reported | Yes anti-tTG serum antibodies and/or biopsy proven |
Casciato 2015 | 31.5 | 9/1 | 21.4 | Six generalised tonic-clonic Four partial | Two patients daily Three patients weekly Five patients monthly | 10 abnormal | Yes, all | Yes, three | Yes IgA/IgG-Ttg, IgA/IgG-DGP and IgA EMA serum antibodies Biopsy proven |
Gerace 2017 | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
Gobbi 1992 | 16.4 | 28/15 | 4.5 | Five generalised tonic-clonic 24 partial | Eight patients >1/day Seven patients >1/week Five patients >1/month | Four normal 25 abnormal | Not reported | Yes, 26 No, three | Yes Biopsy proven |
Hernandez 1998 | 18 | 1/3 | 7 | Three partial One generalised tonic-clonic | Two patients > 1/day One patient > 1/week One patient = 1/week | Four abnormal | Not reported | Yes, two No, two | Yes Biopsy proven |
Isikay 2015 | 10.6 | 76/56 | n/a | n/a | n/a | Four new patients abnormal 9.3% Two former patients abnormal 1.5% One control case abnormal 1% | n/a | Yes, 121 No, 11 | Yes Biopsy proven |
Liccheta 2011 | 25.7 | 7/1 | 12.85 | Eight partial | 2 >daily 3 daily 2 weekly 1 yearly | Eight abnormal | Yes, all | No | Yes Biopsy proven |
Parisi 2014 | 9.82 | 16/3 | No seizures | n/a | n/a | Nine abnormal After 6 months GFD EEG abnormalities in one patient and one patient unknown as parents refused follow-up EEG | n/a | Not reported | Yes Biopsy proven |
Sel 2017 | 6.4 | 0/4 | 4.5 | Two generalised tonic-clonic Two partial One no seizures (EEG abnormalities only) | Not documented | All normalised | Four out of five | No | Yes Biopsy proven Anti-tTG serum antibodies |
Volta 2002 | 32 | 3/0 | 23 | One complex partial temporal lobe One simple partial One generalised absence | Not documented | Not measured | Not documented | Yes, one No, two | Yes Biopsy proven IgaAGA, IgAEMA, IgA h-tTGA serum antibodies |
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Share and Cite
Gilbey, Z.; Bold, J. A Gluten Free Diet in the Management of Epilepsy in People with Coeliac Disease or Gluten Sensitivity. Gastrointest. Disord. 2020, 2, 281-299. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord2030026
Gilbey Z, Bold J. A Gluten Free Diet in the Management of Epilepsy in People with Coeliac Disease or Gluten Sensitivity. Gastrointestinal Disorders. 2020; 2(3):281-299. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord2030026
Chicago/Turabian StyleGilbey, Zoë, and Justine Bold. 2020. "A Gluten Free Diet in the Management of Epilepsy in People with Coeliac Disease or Gluten Sensitivity" Gastrointestinal Disorders 2, no. 3: 281-299. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord2030026
APA StyleGilbey, Z., & Bold, J. (2020). A Gluten Free Diet in the Management of Epilepsy in People with Coeliac Disease or Gluten Sensitivity. Gastrointestinal Disorders, 2(3), 281-299. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord2030026