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359827

Effect of chronic hepatitis C on serum zinc and its relation as a cofactor to cognitive impairment and nutritional status in hemodialysis patients

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Last updated: 21 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Background and aim
The prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among dialysis patients is higher than in the general population. The prevalence of cognitive impairment (CI) is common among hemodialysis (HD) patients. Also patients with end-stage liver disease are vulnerable to cognitive dysfunction. Malnutrition and inflammation are common occurrences in maintenance HD patients. About 40–78% of individuals on HD suffer from hypozincemia. Zinc deficiency has been observed with high prevalence in liver cirrhosis. This study was carried out to assess the effect of chronic HCV on serum zinc level and its relation as a cofactor to CI and nutritional status in HD patients.
Patients and methods
The study involved 80 HD participants who were enrolled into two groups: group I: 40 HCV-positive HD patients (20 without liver cirrhosis and 20 with liver cirrhosis) and group II: 40 HCV-negative HD patients without liver cirrhosis. All participants were evaluated as regards detailed history and clinical examination, standardized mini-mental state examination (MMSE), malnutrition inflammation score (MIS), Child–Pugh classification, complete blood picture (CBP), prothrombin time, international normalized ratio, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, serum albumin, bilirubin, blood urea, serum creatinine, Na, K, Ca, P, transferrin, ammonia, serum zinc level (predialysis and postdialysis session), virology including anti-HCV Ab, quantitative HCV PCR and hepatitis B surface antigen, /, fibrosis-4 score (FIB-4 score), and abdominal ultrasonography.
Results
We found that MMSE and zinc level were significantly lower and MIS was significantly higher in HCV HD patients with liver cirrhosis when compared with HCV HD patients without liver cirrhosis and HCV-negative HD patients. A positive significant correlation was found between zinc level and MMSE while there was a negative significant correlation between zinc level and MIS.
Conclusion
There may be an association between hypozincemia, CI, and malnutrition in HD patients especially those with chronic hepatitis C associated with liver cirrhosis.

DOI

10.4103/ejode.ejode_23_17

Keywords

Chronic hepatitis C, cognitive impairment, Hemodialysis patients, Nutritional Status, serum zinc level

Authors

First Name

Elsaid H.

Last Name

Ibrahim

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First Name

Mohamed N.

Last Name

Mowafy

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Orcid

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First Name

Dalia A.

Last Name

Maharem

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First Name

Ahmad M.

Last Name

Awad

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First Name

Sherif M.

Last Name

Mamdouh Mohammed

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Volume

3

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

48418

Issue Date

2017-09-01

Receive Date

2017-10-17

Publish Date

2017-09-01

Print ISSN

2356-8062

Online ISSN

2356-9409

Link

https://ejode.journals.ekb.eg/article_359827.html

Detail API

https://ejode.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=359827

Order

359,827

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

​​Egyptian Journal of Obesity, Diabetes and Endocrinology

Publication Link

https://ejode.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Effect of chronic hepatitis C on serum zinc and its relation as a cofactor to cognitive impairment and nutritional status in hemodialysis patients

Details

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Article

Created At

21 Dec 2024