Author information
- 1Department of Medicine, °Department of Cardiac-Thoracic-Vascular Sciences and Public Health, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.
Abstract
Background & aims: The occurrence of overt hepatic encephalopathy (HE) marks a significant progression in the natural history of liver disease. The aims of the present study were: 1) to describe a large cohort of patients with cirrhosis in terms of neuropsychological/neurophysiological HE indices, and 2) to test if the severity of liver disease and/or any such indices [Psychometric Hepatic Encephalopathy Score (PHES), Scan test, electroencephalography (EEG)] predicted mortality/HE risk in a subgroup of such cohort.
Method: 461 patients with cirrhosis (59±10 years; 345 males) were included; information on previous overt HE episodes was available in 407. Follow up information on mortality/HE-related hospitalization in 134/127, respectively. Information on previous overt HE episodes and both mortality and HE-related hospitalization over the follow up in 124.
Results: Patients with a history of overt HE (60%) had poorer liver function, worse neuropsychiatric indices, higher ammonia levels and higher prevalence of portal-systemic shunt. The risk of HE-related hospitalization over the follow up was higher in patients with higher MELD score and worse Scan performance. Mortality was higher in those with higher MELD. Amongst patients without a history of overt HE, those with worse PHES had higher HE risk. Amongst patients with a history, those with higher MELD, better PHES and worse Scan performance had higher HE risk.
Conclusions: In patients without previous overt HE episodes, neuropsychological and neurophysiological tests predict HE, while in those with previous overt HE episodes, HE development largely depends on the severity of liver dysfunction.