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Title: Role of Helicobacter pylori infection in hyperammonemia and subclinical hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhosis of liver. Author: Kini D, Aggarwal R, Saraswat VA, Naik SR. Journal: Indian J Gastroenterol; 2001; 20(6):237-40. PubMed ID: 11817778. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Gastric Helicobacter pylori infection is believed to be associated with a higher risk of hepatic encephalopathy among patients with cirrhosis of liver. However, the role of this infection in causation of subclinical hepatic encephalopathy has not been studied in detail. METHODS: Patients with cirrhosis of liver but no hepatic encephalopathy underwent venous blood ammonia measurement, psychometric tests (number connection tests [NCT] and figure connection tests [FCT]), and gastric biopsies for presence of H. pylori infection. The results of blood ammonia and psychometric tests in the H. pylori-positive and -negative study subjects were compared. RESULTS: Of 58 patients with liver cirrhosis studied, 31 had evidence of gastric H. pylori infection. Venous blood ammonia levels were comparable in patients with (median 29 mmol/L; range 18-47) and without (34 [15-48] mmol/L; p=ns) H. pylori infection. The time taken to complete NCT trail A (median 37 s [range 25-69] versus 36.5 [26-62]), NCT trail B (64 s [48-91] versus 63.5 [42-88]), FCT trail A (59 s [31-115] versus 58 [38-590]) and FCT trail B (76 s [55-187] versus 82 [36-125]) were similar in those with and those without H. pylori infection. For each of the four tests, the proportion of subjects with abnormal test results was similar among H. pylori-positive and -negative subjects. CONCLUSION: Presence of H. pylori infection among patients with cirrhosis of liver but no overt hepatic encephalopathy is not associated with increase in blood ammonia concentration or deterioration in psychomotor function.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]