Opinion Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2019.
World J Gastroenterol. May 28, 2019; 25(20): 2402-2415
Published online May 28, 2019. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v25.i20.2402
Table 1 Factors causing mucosal change
Factors causing mucosal change
Mucosal remodellingFood antigensGluten
Milk
Soya
Egg
Fish
DrugsOlmartesan
Cytotoxic drugs
Colchicine
Vinca
Neomycin
Ipilimumab
Autoimmune associatedMVID
Autoimmune enteropathy
Collagenous sprue
IDDM
Cerebral ataxia
DH
Sarcoidosis
MiscellaneousMalnutrition
Crohn’s disease
Intestinal lymphoma
Z-E syndrome
Eosinophilic enteritis
Antigen-basedTropical sprue
GVHD
Parasitic
Giardiasis
Cryptosporidiosis
Enterocytozoon bieneusi
InfectionHIV
TB
Whipple’s disease
Bacterial overgrowth
Immunodeficiencies
Helicobacter pylori
Post-infectious diarrhoea
Altered villous heightsPreparative artefactsForceps trauma
Fixation contraction
Embedding contraction
Imperfect sectioning
Social factorsAge
Ethnicity Gender
Genetic
background
Geo-cultural environment
Diet
MicrobiomeIntestinal microenvironment
Maternal
Infections
MiscellaneousDiurnal variation
Parasites
Allergy
Antigenic challenge
Various drugs
Variations in cell shapeMorphogenicCell-cell contact
PhysiologicIon-channel fluxes
Mechano-sensors
Hydrostatic
PathologicalVarious enteropathies
Drug-inducedColchicine, etc
True mucosal atrophyChronic radiation damage
Chronic ischaemia
Long-term disuse