Abstract

SummaryClinical observations and animal studies have raised the hypothesis that increased concentrations of manganese (Mn) in whole blood might lead to accumulation of this metal within the basal ganglia in patients with end-stage liver disease. We studied ten patients with liver failure (and ten controls) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and measurement of Mn in brain tissue of three patients who died of progressive liver failure (and three controls) was also done.Whole blood Mn concentrations in patients with liver cirrhosis were significantly increased (median 34·4 μg/L vs 10·3 μg/L in controls; p=0·0004) and pallidal signal intensity indices correlated with blood Mn (Rs=0·8, p=0·0058). Brain tissue samples reveal highest Mn concentrations in the caudate nucleus, followed by the quadrigeminal plate and globus pallidus.Mn accumulates within the basal ganglia in liver cirrhosis. Similarities between Mn neurotoxicity and chronic hepatic encephalopathy suggest that this metal may have a role in the pathogenesis of chronic hepatic encephalopathy. Further studies are warranted because the use of chelating agents could prove to be a new therapeutic option to prevent or reverse this neuropsychiatric syndrome.

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