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Tropical sprue

Last updated: October 29, 2025

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Tropical sprue is a malabsorption syndrome that primarily occurs in tropical regions such as South Asia and the Caribbean. The exact cause is unknown. Tropical sprue typically manifests with chronic diarrhea, progressive weight loss, anorexia, and features of nutritional deficiencies such as anemia, neuropathy, and bone disease. Diagnosis is based on the clinical presentation, evidence of malabsorption, and characteristic histological findings on a small bowel biopsy (e.g., villous atrophy), after other causes have been excluded. Management focuses on correcting fluid, electrolyte, and nutritional deficits, along with a prolonged course of antibiotics (e.g., tetracycline) and supplementation with folic acid and vitamin B12.

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Definitionstoggle arrow icon

Tropical sprue is a disease characterized by chronic diarrhea with subsequent malabsorption in association with a stay in the tropics or subtropics.

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Etiologytoggle arrow icon

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Clinical featurestoggle arrow icon

Celiac disease and tropical sprue have similar features (e.g., steatorrhea, abdominal pain, weight loss), but only tropical sprue responds to antibiotics.

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Diagnosistoggle arrow icon

The diagnosis is established based on characteristic clinical features, laboratory evidence of malabsorption, characteristic histological findings, and the exclusion of other causes. [1][2]

Laboratory studies

Small bowel endoscopy with biopsies [2]

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Differential diagnosestoggle arrow icon

The differential diagnoses listed here are not exhaustive.

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Managementtoggle arrow icon

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Complicationstoggle arrow icon

We list the most important complications. The selection is not exhaustive.

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