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HHT or Rendu-Osler-Weber disease is a genetic disease with an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern, characterized by widespread telangiectases that can involve several organs including the intestinal tract and the liver. Liver involvement by HHT is characterized by widespread diffuse liver vascular malformations that give origin to arteriovenous, arterioportal and portovenous shunts. The prevalence of hepatic involvement in HHT can reach 78%. Less commonly, patients may also develop porto-systemic encephalopathy (PSE). However, there are no studies on the possibility that patients with HHT might develop mHE, a highly plausible hypothesis considering the presence of diffuse macroscopic and microscopic porto-systemic shunt in this pathological condition.
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Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a potentially reversible disorder characterized by neuropsychiatric abnormalities and motor disturbances that range from mild alterations of cognitive and motor functions to coma and death (1-2). This condition has been linked to the combination of gut flora alterations, which increase the production of gut-derived toxins such as ammonia and indoles, and porto-systemic shunts, leading to endotoxemia associated to systemic and cerebral inflammation (3-4). The subclinical expression of HE is defined minimal hepatic encephalopathy (mHE) (5-7). The latter condition is characterized by the presence of various quantifiable neurophysiological and neuropsychological deficits that are only recognized by the use of specific diagnostic tools such as the paper-and-pencil tests and its variants as well as critical flicker frequency (CFF) (8-11).
The visual test based on CFF measures the frequency (Hz) when impression of fused light turns to a flickering one (5,11). This neurophysiological test has an elevated specificity and reproducibility, with only little biases due to training effects and daytime variability (7,11-13). CFF has also shown the ability to predict the risk of developing overt HE in cirrhotics undergoing transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) (14,15).
HHT or Rendu-Osler-Weber disease is a genetic disease with an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern, characterized by widespread telangiectases that can involve several organs including the intestinal tract and the liver (16). There are two main types of the disease, HHT1 and HHT2, which are caused respectively by mutations in ENG gene on chromosome 9 coding for endoglin for HHT1and mutations in ACVRL1 gene on chromosome 12 for HHT2 (17,18). These two types of the disease account for most clinical cases but mutations in MADH4 gene on chromosome 5 (encodingSMAD4), have been recently described, and a new type HHT3 has been reported (17). HHT2 is associated with a high rate of liver involvement (18).
Liver involvement by HHT is characterized by widespread diffuse liver vascular malformations that give origin to arteriovenous, arterioportal and portovenous shunts. The prevalence of hepatic involvement in HHT can reach 78% (19). Less commonly, patients may also develop porto-systemic encephalopathy (PSE) (20). However, there are no studies on the possibility that patients with HHT might develop mHE, a highly plausible hypothesis considering the presence of diffuse macroscopic and microscopic porto-systemic shunt in this pathological condition.
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