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Nutrition and Muscle in Cirrhosis.
Anand, Anil C.
Affiliation
  • Anand AC; Indraprastha Apollo Hospital, New Delhi, India.
J Clin Exp Hepatol ; 7(4): 340-357, 2017 Dec.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29234200
ABSTRACT
As the cirrhosis progresses, development of complication like ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, variceal bleeding, kidney dysfunction, and hepatocellular carcinoma signify increasing risk of short term mortality. Malnutrition and muscle wasting (sarcopenia) is yet other complications that negatively impact survival, quality of life, and response to stressors, such as infection and surgery in patients with cirrhosis. Conventionally, these are not routinely looked for, because nutritional assessment can be a difficult especially if there is associated fluid retention and/or obesity. Patients with cirrhosis may have a combination of loss of skeletal muscle and gain of adipose tissue, culminating in the condition of "sarcopenic obesity." Sarcopenia in cirrhotic patients has been associated with increased mortality, sepsis complications, hyperammonemia, overt hepatic encephalopathy, and increased length of stay after liver transplantation. Assessment of muscles with cross-sectional imaging studies has become an attractive index of nutritional status evaluation in cirrhosis, as sarcopenia, the major component of malnutrition, is primarily responsible for the adverse clinical consequences seen in patients with liver disease. Cirrhosis is a state of accelerated starvation, with increased gluconeogenesis that requires amino acid diversion from other metabolic functions. Protein homeostasis is disturbed in cirrhosis due to several factors such as hyperammonemia, hormonal, and cytokine abnormalities, physical inactivity and direct effects of ethanol and its metabolites. New approaches to manage sarcopenia are being evolved. Branched chain amino acid supplementation, Myostatin inhibitors, and mitochondrial protective agents are currently in various stages of evaluation in preclinical studies to prevent and reverse sarcopenia, in cirrhosis.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Journal: J Clin Exp Hepatol Year: 2017 Type: Article Affiliation country: India

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Journal: J Clin Exp Hepatol Year: 2017 Type: Article Affiliation country: India