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Title: Systemic inflammatory response syndrome in patients with liver cirrhosis. Author: Abdel-Khalek EE, El-Fakhry A, Helaly M, Hamed M, Elbaz O. Journal: Arab J Gastroenterol; 2011 Dec; 12(4):173-7. PubMed ID: 22305496. Abstract: BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS: Patients with liver cirrhosis present an increased susceptibility to the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), which is considered the cause of hospital admission in about 10% of patients and is present in about 40% of those admitted for ongoing complications. We tried to assess the prevalence of the SIRS with the possible effects on the course of the disease during hospital stay. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Two hundred and three patients with liver cirrhosis were examined and investigated with close monitoring during hospital stay. The main clinical endpoints were death and the development of portal hypertension-related complications. RESULTS: Eighty-one patients met the criteria of SIRS (39.9%). We found significant correlations between SIRS and jaundice (p=0.005), bacterial infection (p=0.008), white blood cell count (p<0.001), low haemoglobin concentration (p=0.004), high serum creatinine levels (p<0.001), high alanine aminotransferase levels (p<0.001), serum bilirubin levels (p<0.001), international normalised ratio (p<0.001), serum albumin levels (p=0.033), high Child-Pugh score (p<0.001). During the follow-up period, 26 patients died (12.8%), 15 developed portal hypertension-related bleeding (7.3%), 30 developed hepatic encephalopathy (14.7%), and 9 developed hepatorenal syndrome type-1 (4.4%). SIRS showed significant correlations both to death (p<0.001) and to portal hypertension-related complications (p<0.001). CONCLUSION: The systemic inflammatory response syndrome occurs in patients with advanced cirrhosis and is associated with a bad prognosis.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]