Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3265833 Digestive and Liver Disease 2008 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Background and AimVariceal bleeding carries a high-mortality rate in patients with liver cirrhosis. Since coagulation and fibrinolysis are abnormal in these patients we evaluated whether or not abnormalities of these haemostasis systems were independently related to mortality.MethodsGlobal coagulation, coagulation activation and fibrinolysis measurements were performed in 43 cirrhotics bleeding from esophageal varices at baseline and during follow-up and in 43 non-bleeding cirrhotic patients at baseline only.ResultsBaseline measurements of coagulation activation and fibrinolysis were more impaired in bleeders. In bleeders, prothrombin time, tissue type plasminogen activator antigen and d-dimer plasma levels were persistently more abnormal in patients who died. High-d-dimer, infection, Child-Pugh C class and MELD score ≥17 were the significant predictors of death at univariate analysis. Two different multivariate analyses to assess the independent prognostic value of these variables, one including the Child-Pugh class, the other including MELD, were performed. Independent predictors of death were high-d-dimer and infection, but not Child-Pugh class, in the former; MELD and infection, but not d-dimer, in the latter.ConclusionsBeside infection, high-d-dimer is a stronger predictor of death as compared to Child-Pugh C class, but not to a MELD score ≥17.

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