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World J Gastroenterol. Jan 21, 2007; 13(3): 421-425
Published online Jan 21, 2007. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v13.i3.421
Serum levels of soluble Fas, nitric oxide and cytokines in acute decompensated cirrhotic patients
Christoph Elsing, Sabine Harenberg, Wolfgang Stremmel, Thomas Herrmann
Christoph Elsing, Sabine Harenberg, Department of Gastroenterology, St. Elisabeth Hospital, Dorsten, Germany
Wolfgang Stremmel, Thomas Herrmann, Department of Gastroenterology, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Author contributions: All authors contributed equally to the work.
Correspondence to: Christoph Elsing, MD, Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, St. Elisabeth-Hospital, PO Box 580, Dorsten 46225, Germany. c.elsing@krankenhaus-dorsten.de
Telephone: +49-236-2292744 Fax: +49-236-29217044
Received: August 9, 2006
Revised: October 3, 2006
Accepted: November 4, 2006
Published online: January 21, 2007
Abstract

AIM: To evaluate plasma levels of nitrite/nitrate (NOx), soluble Fas (sFas) antigen, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) in patients with compensated and acute decompensated cirrhosis and to evaluate mediators causing acute decompensation in liver cirrhosis.

METHODS: This prospective study was conducted in the medical intensive care unit of an academic tertiary center. Fifty-five patients with acute decompensation (gastrointestinal hemorrhage, encephalopathy, hydropic decompensation) and twenty-five patients with compensated liver cirrhosis were included. Blood samples were taken for analyses of sFas, Nox, IL-6, TNF-α. Liver enzymes and kidney functions were also tested.

RESULTS: In patients with acute decompensation, plasma sFas levels were higher than in non-decompensated patients (15 305 ± 4646 vs 12 458 ± 4322 pg/mL, P < 0.05). This was also true for the subgroup of patients with alcoholic liver cirrhosis (P < 0.05). The other mediators were not different and none of the parameters predicted survival, except for ALT (alanine-aminotransferase). In patients with portal-hypertension-induced acute hemorrhage, NOx levels were significantly lower than in patients with other forms of decompensation (70.8 ± 48.3 vs 112.9 ± 74.9 pg/mL, P < 0.05). When NOx levels were normalized to creatinine levels, the difference disappeared. IL-6, TNF-α and sFas were not different between bleeders and non-bleeders. In decompensated patients sFas, IL-6 and NOx levels correlated positively with creatinine levels, while IL-6 levels were dependent on Child class.

CONCLUSION: In acute decompensated cirrhotic patients sFas is increased, suggesting a role of apoptosis in this process and patients with acute bleeding have lower NOx levels. However, in this acute complex clinical situation, kidney function seems to have a predominant influence on mediator levels.

Keywords: Variceal hemorrhage; Liver cirrhosis; Cytokine; Nitrite/nitrate; Soluble Fas