P
Paul J. Ciclitira
Researcher at St Thomas' Hospital
Publications - 182
Citations - 7470
Paul J. Ciclitira is an academic researcher from St Thomas' Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coeliac disease & Gliadin. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 182 publications receiving 6966 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul J. Ciclitira include King's College London & Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Diagnosis and management of adult coeliac disease: guidelines from the British Society of Gastroenterology
Jonas F. Ludvigsson,Jonas F. Ludvigsson,Julio C. Bai,Federico Biagi,Timothy R. Card,Carolina Ciacci,Paul J. Ciclitira,Peter H.R. Green,Marios Hadjivassiliou,Anne Holdoway,David A. van Heel,Katri Kaukinen,Daniel A. Leffler,Jonathan N. Leonard,Knut E.A. Lundin,Norma McGough,Mike Davidson,Joseph A. Murray,Gillian L Swift,Marjorie M. Walker,Fabiana Zingone,David S Sanders +21 more
TL;DR: A multidisciplinary panel of 18 physicians and 3 non-physicians from eight countries reviewed the literature on diagnosis and management of adult coeliac disease and the recommendations are presented.
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Hla types in celiac disease patients not carrying the DQA1*05-DQB1*02 (DQ2) heterodimer: results from the european genetics cluster on celiac disease
Kati Karell,A.S. Louka,S J Moodie,Henry Ascher,F. Clot,Luigi Greco,Paul J. Ciclitira,Ludvig M. Sollid,Jukka Partanen +8 more
TL;DR: The results underline the primary importance of HLA-DQ alleles in susceptibility to celiac disease, and the extreme rarity of celiac patients carrying neither the D Q2 or DQ8 heterodimers nor one half of the DQ2 heterodimer alone.
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AGA technical review on celiac sprue
TL;DR: The literature review and the recommendations therein were prepared for the American Gastroenterological Association Clinical Practice and Practice Economics Committee and were approved by the Committee on September 23, 2000 and by the AGA governing board on November 12, 2000.
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Tight junctions in inflammatory bowel diseases and inflammatory bowel disease associated colorectal cancer.
Jonathan Landy,E. Ronde,Nick R. English,Susan K. Clark,Ailsa Hart,Stella C. Knight,Paul J. Ciclitira,Hafid O. Al-Hassi +7 more
TL;DR: An overview of recent literature focusing on the role of tight junction proteins, in particular claudins, in inflammatory bowel diseases and inflammatory bowel disease associated colorectal cancer is given.
Journal ArticleDOI
Wheat peptide challenge in coeliac disease
R. P. Sturgess,P. Day,Harold Ellis,M Kontakou,Paul J. Ciclitira,Knut E.A. Lundin,H.A Gjertsen +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the oligopeptide corresponding to aminoacids 31-49 of A-gliadin is toxic in vivo, but there is no evidence of toxicity of the far N-terminal peptide, residues 3-21, which may contain an epitope to which patients with coeliac disease display variable sensitivity.