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Review
. 2018 Mar-Apr;31(2):151-164.
doi: 10.20524/aog.2018.0232. Epub 2018 Feb 1.

The burden of minimal hepatic encephalopathy: from diagnosis to therapeutic strategies

Affiliations
Review

The burden of minimal hepatic encephalopathy: from diagnosis to therapeutic strategies

Lorenzo Ridola et al. Ann Gastroenterol. 2018 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

Minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) is the mildest form of hepatic encephalopathy (HE). It affects the performance of psychometric tests focused on attention, working memory, psychomotor speed, and visuospatial ability, as well as electrophysiological and other functional brain measures. MHE is a frequent complication of liver disease, affecting up to 80% of tested patients. By being related to falls, an impairment in fitness to drive and the development of overt HE, MHE severely affects the lives of patients and caregivers by altering their quality of life and their socioeconomic status. MHE is detected in clinically asymptomatic patients using appropriate psychometric tests and neurophysiological methods that highlight neuropsychological alterations, such as video-spatial orientation deficits, attention disorders, memory, reaction times, electroencephalogram slowing, prolongation of latency-evoked cognitive potentials, and reduction in the critical flicker frequency. Several treatments have been proposed for MHE treatment, including non-absorbable disaccharides, poorly absorbable antibiotics such as rifaximin, probiotics and branched-chain amino acids. However, because of the multiple diagnosis methods, the various endpoints of treatment trials and the variety of agents used in trials, the treatment of MHE is not currently recommended as routine, but only on a case-by-case basis.

Keywords: Cirrhosis; cognitive impairment; covert hepatic encephalopathy; minimal hepatic encephalopathy.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: None

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Box A: Classic classification of minimal and overt hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Box B: New classification combining minimal HE and Grade I HE, in order to simplify the clinical pattern and easily and uniformly diagnose the presence of clinical overt HE

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