Abstract

BackgroundPeripheral neuropathy is an underestimated problem of compensated liver cirrhosis despite its negative effect on quality of life. The aim was to assess the role of meticulous electrophysiological screening (nerve conduction responses and quantitative motor unit potential analysis) of subclinical peripheral nerve dysfunction in patients with compensated cirrhosis and also to explore its relations with different characteristics of liver disease. Severity of cirrhosis was assessed by Child–Pugh and albumin-bilirubin (ALBI) scores.ResultsPrevalence of hepatic neuropathy (HN) was 82%. It involved sensory and motor fibers (66%), and its pathophysiology was axonal (53.7%) or mixed axonal and demyelinating (46.3). The most sensitive discriminating tests were ulnar sensory conduction velocity (area under curve (AUC) = 0.915) and peak latency (AUC = 0.887), peroneal motor conduction velocity (AUC = 0.885), ulnar distal motor latency (AUC = 0.842), and first dorsal interosseous number of phases (AUC = 0.736). HN showed significant correlation with the severity of liver disease assessed by both child (P = 0.029) and ALBI (P = 0.016) scores and also correlated with the low serum albumin level (P = 0.001).ConclusionsSubclinical mild axonal polyneuropathy is very common in post-hepatitis C compensated cirrhosis picked up by meticulous electrophysiological testing, and it is related to severity of liver cirrhosis and low serum albumin level.

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