Reuters Health Information: Liver cirrhosis treatment may curb cerebral edema
Liver cirrhosis treatment may curb cerebral edema
Last Updated: 2015-09-28
By Reuters Staff
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Lactulose and rifaximin
treatment of cirrhosis patients with minimal hepatic
encephalopathy (MHE) reverses low-grade cerebral edema,
according to researchers from India.
In a September 17 online paper in Clinical and
Translational Gastroenterology, Dr. Radha K. Dhiman and
colleagues at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education
and Research in Chandigarh, observed that as many as 80% of
liver cirrhosis patients may have MHE. The condition impairs
daily functioning and health-related quality of life and
predicts the development of overt HE.
They further noted that, on magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), decreased magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) in the brain
characterizes cerebral edema, and to evaluate its reversibility,
they studied 23 patients with cirrhosis. Of these, 14 had MHE
and nine did not. Also included were six healthy controls.
Patients were followed for eight weeks and seven in each
cirrhosis group completed the study. Blood analysis showed that
ammonia levels were significantly higher in the cirrhosis group
than in controls and in the MHE group compared to non-MHE
patients. Ammonia correlated positively with interleukin-1 and
interleukin-6 levels.
Among the team's findings were that MTRs in parietal white
matter, internal capsule and basal ganglia were significantly
lower in the MHE group compared with controls and non-MHE
patients. However, following treatment, MHE patients showed
significant MTR increase in these areas.
IL-6 and ammonia had significant negative and significant
positive psychometric hepatic encephalopathy score (PHES)
correlation with MTR in various regions. Nevertheless, there was
no significant correlation between changes in MTR values and
changes in PHES, ammonia, or inflammatory markers levels after
treatment in MHE patients.
However, the team noted that this may have been due to the
small number of patients and said these findings suggest "that
inflammation and ammonia have a role to play in the genesis of
low-grade cerebral edema in patients with MHE with a resultant
cognitive decline."
They concluded, "Cerebral edema is reversible after
treatment. MTR may be used as an objective surrogate end point
in future trials assessing the efficacy of treatment of MHE."
Dr. Dhiman did not respond to a request for comment by
press time.
The authors reported no funding or disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1jqZWaC
Clin Transl Gastroenterol 2015.
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