Abstract

Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a serious neuropsychiatric complication of cirrhosis in alcoholic patients that is characterized clinically by personality changes, sleep abnormalities, and impaired motor coordination, as well as cognitive dysfunction progressing to stupor and coma. Procedures used for diagnosis and grading of HE include neurologic assessment, electroencephalography, psychometric testing, and use of the critical flicker frequency test. Neuropathologically, HE in cirrhosis is principally a disorder of neuroglia characterized by Alzheimer type II astrocytosis and activation of microglia. However, thalamic and cerebellar neuronal pathologies have been noted as well as lesions to globus pallidus and substantia nigra, leading to a condition known as "parkinsonism in cirrhosis." Multiple mechanisms have been proposed to account for the pathogenesis of HE in cirrhosis, including the neurotoxic actions of ammonia and manganese (normally removed via the hepatobiliary route), impaired brain energy metabolism, central proinflammatory mechanisms, and alterations of both excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission. Treatment of HE in cirrhosis continues to rely on ammonia-lowering strategies such as lactulose, antibiotics, probiotics and l-ornithine l-aspartate with nutritional management consisting of adequate (but not excessive) dietary protein and vitamin B1 supplements. l-DOPA may improve parkinsonian symptoms. Liver transplantation leads to recovery of central nervous system function in the majority of cases.

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