4.5 Article

Chronic acquired hepatocerebral degeneration: effects of liver transplantation on neurological manifestations

Journal

NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 411-415

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s10072-011-0481-z

Keywords

Chronic acquired hepatocerebral degeneration; Movement disorders; Cognitive impairment; Liver transplantation

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Three cirrhotic patients with chronic acquired hepatocerebral degeneration (CAHD) received neurologic, neuropsychologic and neuroimaging assessment before and after liver transplantation (LT). Before transplantation, neurologic dysfunction consisted in severe bradykinesia, dystonia, dyskinesia, ataxia and dysarthria. Cognitive impairment affected mainly attentional and executive domains. Brain MRI showed bilateral hyperintensities of the basal ganglia on T1-weighted images. After transplantation, motor manifestations promptly resolved. Cognitive testing showed a major improvement in two patients, whereas cognitive performances were slightly worsened in the third, reasonably due to the effects of a head injury before LT and a tacrolimus-related encephalopathy arising early after LT. MRI images 12 months later showed a slight reduction of the previously disclosed abnormalities in all three patients. None of them experienced recurrence of CAHD. Our observation reinforces the assumption that surgery is the best treatment option for CAHD and that severe neurological impairment in CAHD should not be considered a contraindication for LT.

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