Abstracts of the 2021 Annual meeting of the ALEH (Asociación Latinoamericana para el Estudio del Hígado)
More infoIn patients with minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE), the spectrum of cognitive functions impaired is related to motor slowness, although the attentional network could also be affected. The posterior and frontal attentional networks can be assessed with discrimination and interference tests, respectively.
ObjectiveCompare the response to the increase of attentional demands through the discrimination test in the presence of distractor stimuli.
MethodsThirty-five cirrhotic (55±3.4 years old) patients and forty-seven controls (41±11.1 years old) performed a discrimination task consisting of two different tones and an interference task of three tones. Reaction times (RT) were recorded. MHE was detected with the number connecting test (NCT-B), age, and years of education corrected.
ResultsMHE was detected in 12/35 (34%) of cirrhotic patients. Analysis of covariance ANCOVA (group as a factor, age, and education as covariables) was statistically significant for RT of the discrimination task; control vs cirrhosis (p=0.011) and control vs MHE (p<0.001). For the interference task in both control vs cirrhosis and control vs MHE (p<0.001), the RTs were not different between MHE and cirrhosis.
ConclusionsThe attentional network anterior and posterior assessed with discrimination and interference attentional test is impaired in both cirrhotic and MHE patients compared to controls.