Moran S, López-Sánchez M, Milke-García MDP, Rodríguez-Leal G. Current approach to treatment of minimal hepatic encephalopathy in patients with liver cirrhosis. World J Gastroenterol 2021; 27(22): 3050-3063 [PMID: 34168407 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i22.3050]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Segundo Moran, PhD, Doctor, Laboratory of Hepatology Research, Centro Médico Nacional, Siglo XXI, Mexican Institute of Social Security, Cuauhtemoc 330, Mexico City 06720, Mexico. segundomoran@hotmail.com
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Minireviews
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Gastroenterol. Jun 14, 2021; 27(22): 3050-3063 Published online Jun 14, 2021. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v27.i22.3050
Table 1 Classification of the different stages of hepatic encephalopathy
Diagnostic criteria
Classification stages
ISHEN
Unimpaired
Covert hepatic encephalopathy
Overt hepatic encephalopathy
WHC
MHE
Grade I
Grade II
Grade III
Grade IV
No encephalopathy, no history of OHE
Imperceptible cognitive alterations during routine clinical examination
Trivial lack of awareness; Euphoria or anxiety; Shortened attention span; Impairment of addition or subtraction; Altered sleep rhythm
Lethargy or apathy; Disorientation for time; Obvious personality change; Inappropriate behavior; Dyspraxia asterixis
Somnolence to semistupor; Responsive to stimuli; Confused; Gross disorientation; Bizarre behavior
Coma
Table 2 Diagnostic tools for the diagnosis of minimal hepatic encephalopathy
Test type
Test approach to differentiate MHE form unimpaired subjects
Formal neuropsychological; Assessment
No standard battery for MHE has been designed, but could include test of attention, executive function, psychomotor ability, and speed information processing to evaluate cognition, and mental activity.
Neuropsychological
EEG: Detect changes in cortical cerebral activity; Evoked potentials: Measurement of firing patterns of single cells or cell clusters.
Computerised
SCAN test: Measures speed and accuracy to perform a digit recognition memory task of increasing complexity; CFF: Degree of vigilance; CRT: Relies on the repeated registration of the motor reaction time to auditory stimuli. Measures the stability of the reaction time; Stroop test: Evaluates psychomotor speed and cognitive flexibility; ICT: Test of response inhibition and working memory.
Imaging
MRI: Through mean kurtosis values, evaluates six regions of interest, and amplitude of low frequency fluctuation values, which correlate with PHES values.
Short neuropsychological batteries
PHES: Evaluates cognitive/psychomotor processing speed and visuomotor coordination (NCT-A, NCT-B, SDT, LTT, DST); ANT: Cognitive function related to prefrontal anterior/cortex cortical areas.
Table 3 Published studies using several options for minimal hepatic encephalopathy treatment: Diet, branched-chain amino acids or L-ornithine-L-aspartate supplementation, and probiotics/symbiotics
Reversal of 50% in symbiotic group, 50% in fermentable fibers group and 13% in placebo. Not statistically significant until compression of treatment groups vs placebo (P = 0.03)9
Mean psychometric scores before and after probiotics -9.9 (-13.3- to -6.5) vs -5.7 (-8.4 to 2.9) P = 0.014. Proportion of patients with scores < -5 did not change in either group10
Improvement in NCT-A time (11.8%), NCT-B time (11.8%), DST raw score (9.1%), BDT raw score (0.0%), LTT time (20.7%), LTT errors (39.8%), SDT time (12.3%) from basal values
Decrease of 46.6% of total errors respect to baseline in rifaximin group (P < 0.001)6. Improvement in NCT-A 91% vs 61% (NNT: 4); NCT-B: 81% vs 33% (NNT: 2); and ICT lures: 76% vs 43% (NNT: 3)7
ITT analysis shows a reversal at 2 wk: lactulose 40.0% vs rifaximin 52.63% (NNT: 8). ITT analysis at 3 mo shows reversal in 69.1% and 73.7% of lactulose and rifaximin, (NNT: 22)
ITT analysis: Improvement in CFF values (Hz) from baseline in 11.42%, 6.5%, 8.68%, and 2.28%
Citation: Moran S, López-Sánchez M, Milke-García MDP, Rodríguez-Leal G. Current approach to treatment of minimal hepatic encephalopathy in patients with liver cirrhosis. World J Gastroenterol 2021; 27(22): 3050-3063