Medical Hypotheses
Volume 75, Issue 1 , Pages 93-98, July 2010

Cleft lip and palate: An adverse pregnancy outcome due to undiagnosed maternal and paternal coeliac disease

  • Gururaj Arakeri

      Affiliations

    • Peter Brennan’s Indian academy of craniofacial researches (PBIACR), Shahapur, Karnataka, India
    • Department of Oral Maxillofacial and Reconstructive Surgery, Sri Sai College of Dental Surgery, Vikarabad, India
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Gangashri, Basaveshwara Nagar, Shahapur, Gulbarga 585223, Karnataka, India. Tel.: +91 9341428302/9347261640.
  • ,
  • Veena Arali

      Affiliations

    • Peter Brennan’s Indian academy of craniofacial researches (PBIACR), Shahapur, Karnataka, India
    • Department of Pedodontics and Preventive Dentistry, Sri Sai College of Dental Surgery, Vikarabad, India
  • ,
  • Peter A. Brennan

      Affiliations

    • Peter Brennan’s Indian academy of craniofacial researches (PBIACR), Shahapur, Karnataka, India
    • Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth, UK

Received 18 January 2010; accepted 29 January 2010. published online 26 February 2010.

Summary 

Development of orofacial component involves a complex series of events. Any insult to this significant event can lead to various orofacial cleft defects. The main categories among orofacial clefts are isolated cleft palate and cleft lip with or without cleft palate. There have been many factors implicated in the development of the anomaly. The environmental factors which contribute and the genes which predispose to the condition remain obscure despite decades of research. Though it is generally agreed that folic acid deficiency is a contributory factor for non-syndromic cleft lip and palate, fewer concerns are directed towards the role for maternal/paternal nutrition in orofacial cleft origin. However, previously undescribed, here we consider the potential influence of maternal and paternal coeliac disease on the etiology of non-syndromic cleft lip and palate as an unfavorable pregnancy outcome. We postulated this relationship based on our observation, study and an empirical survey, and could be due either to (I) folic acid mal absorption (II) a genetically mediated genomic imprinting system.

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PII: S0306-9877(10)00063-0

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2010.01.047

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 75, Issue 1 , Pages 93-98, July 2010