Background/Aims: The development of esophageal varices (EV) and resultant bleeding are the most critical complications of portal hypertension. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy is the gold standard for diagnosis of EV. To find a non-invasive method for diagnosis of EV and to predict the bleeding risk is appealing and would decrease the cost and discomfort of upper endoscopy. The aim of our study was to evaluate the blood ammonia level as a predictor of the presence of EV and of a high risk of bleeding. Materials and Methods: In this cross-sectional study, a total of 359 patients with cirrhosis were examined for the presence of EV by upper endoscopy. Abdominal ultrasonography, calculation of the Child-Pugh score, and measurement of blood ammonia were performed for each patient. Results: The blood ammonia level was significantly higher in patients with EV than in those without it (p<0.001), and in patients with a high risk of variceal bleeding than in those with a low risk (p=0.026). Conclusion: An increased blood ammonia level and splenic vein diameter are predictors for the presence of EV and bleeding risk factors. The blood ammonia level may be clinically useful as it correlates with and is an independent predictor for both the endoscopic risk signs and risk factors of bleeding, and therefore, it could be used in patients with cirrhosis to decrease the number of screening endoscopies they are subjected to.
Background Portal hypertensive gastropathy (PHG) is a common anomaly with potential for bleeding found in portal hypertension. Blood ammonia levels correlate well with liver disease severity and existence of portosystemic shunts. Increased ammonia results in vasodilation and hepatic stellate cell activation causing and exacerbating portal hypertension. Objective To assess the relation of blood ammonia to the presence and severity of portal hypertensive gastropathy in cirrhosis. Methods This cross-sectional study included 381 cirrhotics undergoing screening for esophageal varices (EV) divided into a portal hypertensive gastropathy group (203 patients with EV and PHG), esophageal varix group (41 patients with EV but no PHG), and control group (137 patients with no EV or PHG). A full clinical examination, routine laboratory tests, abdominal ultrasonography, child score calculation, and blood ammonia measurement were performed for all patients. Results Blood ammonia, portal vein, splenic vein, and splenic longitudinal diameters were significantly higher and platelet counts lower in patients with EV and EV with PHG than controls. Patients having EV with PHG had significantly higher bilirubin and ammonia than those with EV but no PHG. Severe PHG was associated with significantly higher ammonia, EV grades, and superior location and a lower splenic longitudinal diameter than mild PHG. The PHG score showed a positive correlation with blood ammonia and a negative correlation with splenic longitudinal diameter. Conclusions Blood ammonia levels correlate with the presence, severity, and score of portal hypertensive gastropathy in cirrhosis suggesting a causal relationship and encouraging trials of ammonia-lowering treatments for the management of severe PHG with a tendency to bleed.
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