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Lactulose improves cognitive functions and health-related quality of life in patients with cirrhosis who have minimal hepatic encephalopathy

โœ Scribed by Srinivasa Prasad; Radha K. Dhiman; Ajay Duseja; Yogesh K. Chawla; Arpita Sharma; Ritesh Agarwal


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
281 KB
Volume
45
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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โœฆ Synopsis


Minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) has a negative effect on patients' daily functioning. Thus far, no study has investigated the effect of treatment-related improvement in cognitive functions on health-related quality of life (HRQOL). We measured psychometric performance by number and figure connection tests parts A and B, picture completion, and block design tests and HRQOL by the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP) of 90 patients with cirrhosis on inclusion into the study and 3 months later. A Z score less than ุŠ2 on the neuropsychological (NP) tests was considered abnormal. Sixty-one (67.7%) patients had MHE. They were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive treatment (lactulose) for 3 months (n โ€ซุโ€ฌ 31) or no treatment (n โ€ซุโ€ฌ 30) in a nonblinded design. The mean number of abnormal NP tests decreased significantly in patients in the treated group (baseline, 2.74 [95% CI 2.40-3.08]; after 3 months, .75 [95% CI .36-1.16]) compared with patients in the untreated group (baseline, 2.47 [95% CI 2.19-2.74]; after 3 months, 2.55 [95% CI 2.16-2.94]); multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) for time and treatment, P โ€ซุโ€ฌ 0.001. The mean total SIP score improved among patients in the treated group (baseline, 10.39 [95% CI 9.36-11.43]; after 3 months, 3.77 [95% CI 2.52-5.02]) compared with patients in the untreated group (baseline, 10.36 [95% CI 8.98-11.73]; after 3 months, 10.39 [95% CI 8.36-12.42]); MANOVA for time and treatment, P โ€ซุโ€ฌ 0.002. Improvement in HRQOL was related to the improvement in psychometry. Conclusion: Treatment with lactulose improves both cognitive function and HRQOL in patients with cirrhosis who have MHE. (HEPATOLOGY 2007;45:549-559.)

See Editorial on Page 547 H epatic encephalopathy (HE) is a spectrum of neuropsychiatric abnormalities seen in patients with liver dysfunction diagnosed after exclusion of other known brain diseases. The Working Party at the 11th World Congress of Gastroenterology, Vienna, un-der the Organization Mondiale de Gastroentrologie proposed a multiaxial definition of HE that defined both the type of hepatic abnormality (type A, B, or C) and the duration and characteristics of neurological manifestations (episodic, persistent, or minimal HE) in chronic liver disease. 1 HE has been considered a continuous dimension that could be measured with 1 index to summarize several neurological domains, such as cognition, emotion, behavior, and biologic rhythms. Minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) represents a portion of this dimension and is the mildest form of HE. Whereas patients with HE have impaired intellectual functioning, personality changes, altered level of consciousness, and neuromuscular dysfunction, patients with MHE have no recognizable clinical symptoms of HE but do have mild cognitive and psychomotor deficits. In the absence of a "gold standard" for determining MHE, neuropsychological (NP) and neurophysiological methods have been the most trusted and widely used tests to diagnose this condition. 1,2 MHE is considered clinically relevant for at least 3 reasons. First, it impairs patients' daily functioning and


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