Abstract

Evoked responses have not been studied in patients with acute severe hepatitis (ASH) with or without hepatic encephalopathy. This prospective study was undertaken to find out diagnostic as well as prognostic value of visual evoked responses (VER), and brain stem auditory evoked responses (BAER) in patients with ASH with or without encephalopathy. Visual evoked responses and BAER were studied in 20 patients (14 males and six females) with ASH. The patients were diagnosed as having severe hepatitis if acute hepatitis was associated with raised serum bilirubin and serum transaminases, and if they had a prothrombin time index of < 50%. After a detailed neuropsychiatric examination of each patient, the study sample was divided into two groups of 10 patients: ASH without encephalopathy (ASH-WOE), and ASH with encephalopathy (fulminant hepatic failure, FHF). The median P100 latencies of FHF patients were significantly increased compared with controls and patients in the ASH-WOE group. Abnormal P100 latencies, exceeding 95th percentile values of the controls, were present in one patient in the ASH-WOE group and six patients in the FHF group. The median interpeak latencies I-III, III-V and I-V were significantly prolonged in the FHF group. Interpeak latencies III-V were also increased significantly in patients in the ASH-WOE group. While abnormal BAER were seen frequently in both groups, VER abnormalities were largely confined to patients in the FHF group. In the FHF group, six out of 10 patients survived and exhibited clinical improvement in the status of hepatic encephalopathy. Evoked responses were repeated after 2-3 weeks of recovery in these patients and VER abnormalities showed a tendency to normalize, thereby suggesting a prognostic implication. The incidence of abnormal VER in hepatic encephalopathy complicating ASH far exceeded that of abnormal BAER. Markedly prolonged P100 latencies in FHF patients indicate poor prognosis.

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