TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein-calorie malnutrition associated with alcoholic hepatitis. Veterans administration cooperative study group on alcoholic hepatitis
AU - Mendenhall, Charles L.
AU - Anderson, Sharon
AU - Weesner, Robert E.
AU - Goldberg, Stephen J.
AU - Crolic, Kathleen A.
N1 - Funding Information:
From the Hepatitis Research Division, Dietetic Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, and the Cooperative Studies Program Coordinating Center, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Hines, Illinois. This study is Veterans Administration Cooperative Study 119, funded by the Cooperative Studies Program of the Veterans Administration Medical Service. Requests for reprints should be addressed to Dr. Charles L. Mendenhall, Hepatitis Research ( 15 l-F), Veterans Administration Medical Center, 3200 Vine Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45220. Manuscript accepted July 26, 1983.
PY - 1984/2
Y1 - 1984/2
N2 - Three hundred sixty-three alcoholic patients with alcoholic hepatitis were studied in six Veterans Administration medical centers. By history, alcohol consumption was 227.9 g per day, with a mean duration of 23.8 years. Cirrhosis accompanied the alcoholic hepatitis in 58.7 percent of the patients who underwent biopsy or autopsy. Complete nutritional assessment was performed in 284 patients, and observed nutritional changes were classified into those associated with marasmus or those characterizing kwashiorkor. A smaller comparison group of 21 alcoholic patients matched for age and alcohol consumption but without clinically evident liver disease was also studied in an identical manner. None of the patients with liver disease was completely free from malnutrition, whereas 62 percent of the alcoholic patients without liver disease showed abnormalities. In patients with alcoholic hepatitis, some findings associated with marasmus were seen in 86 percent, and some features of kwashiorkor were observed in 100 percent. When present together, the complete picture of kwashiorkor and marasmus correlated closely with the clinical severity of the liver disease (p < 0.005). The nearly constant association of either complete or partial kwashiorkor or marasmus suggests that the separation of these two entities is artificial in alcoholic patients with liver disease. Although, experimentally, malnutrition may not be essential for the development of alcoholic hepatitis, clinically, it appears to precede the development of the liver injury, which suggests an interaction. Recognition is important so that appropriate nutritional therapy can be provided.
AB - Three hundred sixty-three alcoholic patients with alcoholic hepatitis were studied in six Veterans Administration medical centers. By history, alcohol consumption was 227.9 g per day, with a mean duration of 23.8 years. Cirrhosis accompanied the alcoholic hepatitis in 58.7 percent of the patients who underwent biopsy or autopsy. Complete nutritional assessment was performed in 284 patients, and observed nutritional changes were classified into those associated with marasmus or those characterizing kwashiorkor. A smaller comparison group of 21 alcoholic patients matched for age and alcohol consumption but without clinically evident liver disease was also studied in an identical manner. None of the patients with liver disease was completely free from malnutrition, whereas 62 percent of the alcoholic patients without liver disease showed abnormalities. In patients with alcoholic hepatitis, some findings associated with marasmus were seen in 86 percent, and some features of kwashiorkor were observed in 100 percent. When present together, the complete picture of kwashiorkor and marasmus correlated closely with the clinical severity of the liver disease (p < 0.005). The nearly constant association of either complete or partial kwashiorkor or marasmus suggests that the separation of these two entities is artificial in alcoholic patients with liver disease. Although, experimentally, malnutrition may not be essential for the development of alcoholic hepatitis, clinically, it appears to precede the development of the liver injury, which suggests an interaction. Recognition is important so that appropriate nutritional therapy can be provided.
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U2 - 10.1016/0002-9343(84)90776-9
DO - 10.1016/0002-9343(84)90776-9
M3 - Article
C2 - 6421159
AN - SCOPUS:0021326889
SN - 0002-9343
VL - 76
SP - 211
EP - 222
JO - American Journal of Medicine
JF - American Journal of Medicine
IS - 2
ER -