Rahimi Robert S, Rockey Don C
Department of Internal Medicine, Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute, Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, Texas.
Department of Internal Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.
Am J Med Sci. 2016 May;351(5):459-66. doi: 10.1016/j.amjms.2016.02.022. Epub 2016 Feb 17.
Head computed tomography (CT) scans are ordered in patients with cirrhosis along with altered mental status (AMS) during admission, often, despite lack of evidence of any structural abnormality. Thus, we aimed to examine the use of head CT scans in patients with cirrhosis along with AMS and to correlate scan abnormalities with causes of AMS and physical findings.
We defined AMS as having impaired cognition, diminished attention, reduced awareness or altered level of consciousness or all of these, and categorized AMS into the following groups: hepatic encephalopathy (HE), sepsis or infectious, metabolic, exogenous drugs or toxins, structural lesions or psychiatric abnormalities. The primary outcome was presence of any structural brain lesion on head CT scan in patients with cirrhosis along with AMS with correlation of focal neurologic deficits, specifically in patients with HE.
In total, 349 of 1,218 patients with cirrhosis who were admitted to the hospital had AMS; HE was the most common cause of AMS (164 of 349, 47%). A total of 64% (223 of 349) of patients with cirrhosis along with AMS underwent head CT scanning on admission, including 99 of 164 (60%) patients with HE. No patient with HE had focal neurologic findings, or a focal abnormality on head CT scan. Of the patients with focal abnormalities on CT scans, 100% had focal neurologic findings. Patients with cirrhosis along with AMS undergoing head CT scan had similar mortality (76 of 223, 34%) as those with AMS not undergoing head CT scans (47 of 126, 37%; P = nonsignificant).
Nearly two-thirds of patients with cirrhosis along with AMS had head CT scans performed on admission; all patients with a structural lesion on head CT scan had abnormal neurologic examinations. The data suggest that routine brain imaging in patients with cirrhosis that do not have focal neurologic findings is likely not indicated.
肝硬化患者入院时若出现精神状态改变(AMS),即便缺乏任何结构异常的证据,通常也会接受头部计算机断层扫描(CT)检查。因此,我们旨在研究肝硬化合并AMS患者头部CT扫描的应用情况,并将扫描异常与AMS的病因及体格检查结果相关联。
我们将AMS定义为认知受损、注意力减退、意识降低或意识水平改变,或具备以上所有情况,并将AMS分为以下几组:肝性脑病(HE)、败血症或感染、代谢、外源性药物或毒素、结构性病变或精神异常。主要结局是肝硬化合并AMS患者头部CT扫描出现任何脑结构病变,并与局灶性神经功能缺损相关,特别是HE患者。
总共1218例肝硬化住院患者中有349例出现AMS;HE是AMS最常见的病因(349例中的164例,47%)。总共64%(349例中的223例)肝硬化合并AMS患者入院时接受了头部CT扫描,其中164例HE患者中有99例(60%)。没有HE患者出现局灶性神经功能体征或头部CT扫描有局灶性异常。CT扫描有局灶性异常的患者中,100%有局灶性神经功能体征。肝硬化合并AMS且接受头部CT扫描的患者死亡率(223例中的76例,34%)与未接受头部CT扫描的AMS患者(126例中的47例,37%;P值无统计学意义)相似。
近三分之二肝硬化合并AMS患者入院时接受了头部CT扫描;头部CT扫描有结构病变的所有患者神经检查均异常。数据表明,对于没有局灶性神经功能体征的肝硬化患者,可能无需进行常规脑成像检查。