Measurement of portal vein indices and splenic index by ultrasound and their association with gastroesophageal varices in cirrhosis of liver.
Ann Med Surg (Lond)
; 85(12): 5926-5931, 2023 Dec.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38098538
ABSTRACT
Background and Objectives:
Esophageal and gastric fundic varices are common in liver cirrhosis patients. Ultrasound with the Doppler study assesses liver cirrhosis severity, measuring portal vein and splenic indices' association with gastroesophageal varices.Methodology:
This study was conducted on 64 subjects with sonographic features of chronic liver disease who were referred for routine follow-up scans. Portal vein diameter, average velocity, splenic index, congestion index (CI), and portal vein area and velocity were measured.Result:
Subjects with gastroesophageal varices had significantly larger portal vein diameters (14.7±1.64 mm) compared to those without varices (12.05±1.26 mm) (P<0.05). Conversely, subjects without varices exhibited a higher portal vein velocity of (17.9±0.6 cm/s) than with varices (13.91±2.01 cm/s) (P=0.0005). The splenic index was higher in subjects with varices (1120±494 cm3) than those without varices (419 cm3) (P<0.05). The CI was also higher in subjects with varices. Portal vein velocity showed the highest sensitivity (94%) with a cutoff of 19 cm/s, while the CI had the highest diagnostic accuracy (93.75%) with a cutoff of 0.10 cm xsec. The splenic index demonstrated a sensitivity of 92.85% and diagnostic accuracy of 92.18% with a cutoff of 480 cm3. The splenic index followed by the CI is found to be a better predictor of esophageal varices (area under the curve of 96.8 and 96%, respectively).Conclusion:
Ultrasonographic assessment of the portal vein and spleen is a reliable, noninvasive method for predicting gastroesophageal varices in liver cirrhosis. The splenic index and CI have high diagnostic accuracy.
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Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2023
Tipo de documento:
Article