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Sarcopenia in cirrhosis: from pathogenesis to interventions

Journal

JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 10, Pages 845-859

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s00535-019-01605-6

Keywords

Muscle loss; Pathways; Mechanisms; Interventions

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)-Institute of Nutrition, Metabolism and Diabetes (INMD) Fellowship-Hepatology
  2. Canadian Association for the Study of the Liver (CASL)
  3. Canadian Liver Foundation (CLF) [HGY-164788]
  4. Canadian National Transplant Research Program (CNTRP)
  5. ATIF Innovation Grant Award 2018
  6. University of Alberta Hospital Foundation (UHF) Grant 2018

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Sarcopenia (severe muscle depletion) is a prevalent muscle abnormality in patients with cirrhosis that confers poor prognosis both pre- and post-liver transplantation. The pathogenesis of sarcopenia is multifactorial and results from an imbalance between protein synthesis and breakdown. Nutritional, metabolic, and biochemical abnormalities seen in chronic liver disease alter whole body protein homeostasis. Hyperammonemia, increased autophagy, proteasomal activity, lower protein synthesis, and impaired mitochondrial function play an important role in muscle depletion in cirrhosis. Factors including cellular energy status, availability of metabolic substrates (e.g., branched-chain amino acids), alterations in the endocrine system (insulin resistance, circulating levels of insulin, insulin-like growth factor-1, corticosteroids, and testosterone), cytokines, myostatin, and exercise are involved in regulating muscle mass. A favored atrophy of type II fast-twitch glycolytic fibers seems to occur in patients with cirrhosis and sarcopenia. Identification of muscle biological abnormalities and underlying mechanisms is required to plan clinical trials to reverse sarcopenia through modulation of specific mechanisms. Accordingly, a combination of nutritional, physical, and pharmacological interventions might be necessary to reverse sarcopenia in cirrhosis. Moderate exercise should be combined with appropriate energy and protein intake, in accordance with clinical guidelines. Interventions with branched chain amino acids, testosterone, carnitine, or ammonia-lowering therapies should be considered individually. Various factors such as dose, type, duration of supplementations, etiology of cirrhosis, amount of dietary protein intake, and compliance with supplementation and exercise should be the focus of future large randomized controlled trials investigating both prevention and treatment of sarcopenia in this patient population.

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