FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 10 2009
Contact: Donna Krupa
Office: (301) 634-7253
commoff@the-aps.org
For Patients With
Cirrhosis, Inflammation May Be Common Thread Behind
Nervous And Heart Rhythm Problems
Findings may have application to bipolar disorder, post-menopausal
depression
BETHESDA, Md. (Feb. 10, 2009)
− Liver cirrhosis is the seventh leading cause of death in the
United States, taking 25,000 lives per year. It is often the result of
alcohol over-consumption or exposure to hepatitis C, either of which can
damage the liver and prevent it from filtering toxins. These toxins then
accumulate in the blood stream and eventually reach the brain where they
disrupt neurological and mental performance, a condition known as hepatic
encephalopathy.
Individuals with cirrhosis are also susceptible to a
change in heart rhythm (decreased heart rate variability). Since cirrhosis,
hepatic encephalopathy and heart rate variability are known to be associated
with inflammation, researchers have examined what role cytokines
(inflammatory molecules) play.
A new study from The American Physiological Society
suggests that these cytokines can lead to both the neurological and
cognitive abnormalities and changes in heart rhythm in patients with
cirrhosis. The results of the study may also apply to other conditions where
heart rate variability is also decreased, such as bipolar disorder and
post-menopausal depression.
The study, “Decreased heart rate variability in
patients with cirrhosis relates to the presence and severity of hepatic
encephalopathy,” was carried out by Ali R. Mani, Sara Montagnese, Clive D.
Jackson, Christopher W. Jenkins, Ian M. Head, Robert C. Stephens, Kevin P.
Moore and Dr. Morgan. All are affiliated with the University College London
Medical School, with the exception of Mr. Jackson, who is with the Royal
Free Hospital, London. The study appears in The American Journal of
Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology.
Three measurements
The study involved 80 patients suffering cirrhosis of
the liver. Sixty-five (81%) of the patients had cirrhosis because of chronic
alcohol abuse, although none had abused alcohol within three months of the
study. Of the remaining 15 participants, seven had developed cirrhosis from
chronic hepatitis while the remaining eight had developed the disease in
various other ways. The participants were compared to a control group of 11
healthy people.
First, the researchers tested for the presence of
hepatic encephalopathy by examining the patient’s mental state. They
conducted various cognitive tests and obtained an electroencephalogram
(EEG). After examination, the study participants were classified as having
either overt hepatic encephalopathy, minimal hepatic encephalopathy or no
encephalopathy.
Second, they measured heart rate variability using an
electrocardiogram. A healthy heart varies the rate at which it beats
depending upon a variety of factors. For example, the heartbeat accelerates
when inhaling and decelerates when exhaling. Reduced heart rate variability
-- that is, a more regular heartbeat -- has been associated with systemic
inflammation and with various neuropsychiatric conditions, such as bipolar
disorder.
Third, in a subgroup of 18 patients, the researchers
also measured for cytokines, which circulate in the blood as part of the
inflammation. Among these cytokines was interleukin-6, a substance that
plays a role in cell signaling as part of the body’s response to
inflammation.
Connected to inflammation
When the researchers began the study, they knew that
cirrhosis of the liver leads to hepatic encephalopathy, systemic
inflammation and reduced heart rate variability. It was not known whether
and how they were related.
Their first major finding was that reduced heart rate
variability and the presence of hepatic encephalopathy were very strongly
connected. The second major finding was that blood levels of the
inflammatory cytokines (including interleukin-6 levels) closely paralleled
both the degree of neuropsychiatric impairment and reduced heart rate
variability. This suggests that inflammatory response plays a role in these
impairments.
Additional Findings
The researchers also found that:
-
In patients with cirrhosis, there were significant
concentrations of cytokines. By contrast, concentrations were below the
level of detection among healthy volunteers.
-
There was no significant differences in heart rate
variability between patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis and patients
with cirrhosis due to other reasons, such as chronic viral hepatitis.
-
The risk of death increased as heart rate variability
decreased.
The authors concluded that inflammation plays a role in
both the reduction in heart rate variability and the development of hepatic
encephalopathy in patients with cirrhosis. In subsequent, yet unpublished
research, they have found that treatment for hepatic encephalopathy not only
improves mental function but also improves heart rate variability. This
treatment also reduces blood levels of cytokines providing further evidence
of a link between systemic inflammation, mental and cardiac function in this
patient group.
NOTE TO EDITORS: To interview Dr. Morgan, please
contact Donna Krupa at (301) 634-7253 or at
commoff@the-aps.org.
Physiology
is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create
health or disease. The American Physiological Society (www.The-APS.org/press)
has been an integral part of this discovery process since it was established
in 1887.
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