Autonomic Nervous System Profiling In Response to Liver Transplantation: Prognostic Evaluation and Preliminary Study

2021 
ABSTRACT Background Liver cirrhosis leads to autonomic dysfunction (AD). We present a pilot study and review of published literature to investigate the long-term changes in the Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) of patients who underwent liver transplant. We propose Autonomic Function Tests (AFT) can be used as a predictor of liver transplant outcome. Methods Twenty-eight patients (19 men and 9 women; mean age 45 years) with cirrhosis due to different etiologies underwent a noninvasive ANS evaluation test, pre– and post–liver transplant at 3 to 6 months, 8 to 12 months, and 14 to 24 months. Data were compared with 45 age-matched controls (14 men and 31 women). We investigated changes in the following 3 adrenergic measures: percentage of cutaneous vasoconstriction in the hand and foot in response to cold stress test and cutaneous blood flow adjustment ratio; and 3 cardiovagal measures: change in heart rate in relation to deep respiration, forced respiration represented as Valsalva Ratio, and head-up tilting (30/15 ratio). Results A total of 23 of 28 patients (82%) had impairment in AFT before transplant, 16 of 28 (57%) in the sympathetic adrenergic measures, and 15 of 28 (54%) in the parasympathetic cardiovagal measures. There was a gradual improvement in ANS function posttransplant, with a significant improvement in the cardiovagal measure of Valsalva Ratio (P Conclusions To optimize outcomes in liver transplant patients with autonomic dysfunction, autonomic testing perhaps combined with frailty testing can be used as objective measures of mortality in the pre–liver transplant stage.
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