Preserved central cholinergic functioning to transcranial magnetic stimulation in de novo patients with celiac disease.
Giuseppe LanzaFrancesco FisicaroCarmela Cinzia D'AgateRaffaele FerriMariagiovanna CantoneLuca FalzoneGiovanni PennisiRita BellaMarios HadjivassiliouManuela PennisiPublished in: PloS one (2021)
Central cholinergic functioning explored by the SAI of the motor cortex resulted to be not affected in these de novo CD patients compared to age-matched healthy controls. Although the statistically significant difference in MoCA, an overt cognitive impairment was not clinically evident in CD patients. Coherently, to date, no study based on TMS or other diagnostic techniques has shown any involvement of the central acetylcholine or the cholinergic fibers within the CNS in CD. This finding might add support to the vascular inflammation hypothesis underlying the so-called "gluten encephalopathy", which seems to be due to an aetiology different from that of the cholinergic dysfunction. Longitudinal studies correlating clinical, TMS, and neuroimaging data, both before and after GFD, are needed.