EVALUATION OF THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN MODEL OF END STAGE LIVER DISEASE (MELD) SCORE AND SERUM LIPID LEVEL IN DECOMPENSATED CIRRHOTIC PATIENTS

Behroozian, R and Sadeghi, E and Khalkhali, H.R (2013) EVALUATION OF THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN MODEL OF END STAGE LIVER DISEASE (MELD) SCORE AND SERUM LIPID LEVEL IN DECOMPENSATED CIRRHOTIC PATIENTS. The Journal of Urmia University of Medical Sciences, 24 (7). pp. 493-498.

[thumbnail of 3 Behrozian.pdf]
Preview
Text
3 Behrozian.pdf

Download (181kB) | Preview

Abstract

The liver plays an essential role in lipid metabolism. For reduced liver
biosynthesis capacity, low levels of triglyceride (TG) and cholesterol (TC) is usually observed in
chronic liver diseases. We conducted this study to determine the relationship between serum lipids and
MELD score level in patients with decompensated cirrhosis.
Materials & Methods: A checklist was prepared to collect data for calculation of MELD score and
serum lipid profile (TG, TC, HDL, and LDL) and the demographic factors in patients with
decompensated cirrhosis. Correlation between MELD score and lipid profile were calculated.
Results: 100 patients (50 male/50 female) with age range of 25 to 84 years old with mean age of 52.49
years entered the study. The value of Serum TC (121±33.0), TG (122±32.88), LDL (64.8±15.8) and
HDL (36.01±15.77) level were measured as lipid panel and INR (2.42±1.59), total bilirubin
(4.68±0.66) and Creatinine level (2.02±1.53) measured for calculating MELD Scores (13.13±6.82).
Conclusion: The Pearson correlation of MELD score with LDL, HDL, TC, TG levels is highly
significant (p<0.001), and is more powerful with TC level (Pearson’s R= -0.87).This relationship was
evaluated with adjust of age and sex. Lower lipid panel can be an indicator for severity of hepatic
failure

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: MELD, Serum lipids, Decompensated Cirrhosis
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email gholipour.s@umsu.ac.ir
Date Deposited: 22 Nov 2017 08:00
Last Modified: 30 Jan 2019 06:21
URI: https://eprints.umsu.ac.ir/id/eprint/3354

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item