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Employment, functional status, health status, and prevalence of anxiety and depression were assessed in patients who had undergone orthotopic liver transplantation at Duke University from 1984 to 1993 to identify social and economic factors that might influence return to work after liver transplantation. Patients were asked to complete mailed questionnaires. A transplant nurse coordinator assigned patients a Karnofsky score, unaware of the questionnaire responses. The response rate was 71% (52 of 72 patients). The median age of the post-liver transplantation patients was 49 years. Median years of education were 13. Sixty-five percent of patients were male. Sixty percent of patients were employed posttransplantation. Employed and unemployed posttransplantation patients showed no significant difference in age, education, gender, marital status, race, family coping skills, or cause of liver disease. Return to work after transplantation did not correlate with socioeconomic status or spouse's employment. Posttransplantation return to work was highly correlated with pretransplant employment (P < .0005). The prevalence of anxiety and depression, assessed by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD), was 9% and was no different in the employed or unemployed patients. Health status, as measured by Karnofsky score, was excellent; all patients received Karnofsky scores > or = 80%. Health perceptions were compared in employed versus unemployed posttransplantation patients with the SF-36, a 36-item short form survey developed by the investigators of the Medical Outcome Study. This revealed significantly different values in the subscale, physical functioning, with a mean score of 70.6 in the employed and a mean score of 48.4 in the unemployed posttransplantation patients (P = .004) and role-physical with a mean score of 61.8 in the employed and a mean score of 27.6 in the unemployed posttransplantation patients (P = .005). Eighty percent of patients not returning to work cited "problems with their health" as their major obstacle to employment. Although objective health status was good to excellent in all patients after transplantation, patients perceived that their health status was poor, with the lowest scores observed in unemployed posttransplantation patients.
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PMID:Effect of orthotopic liver transplantation on employment and health status. 934 41

Psychosocial sequelae and quality of life impairment in patients with end-stage liver disease due to hepatitis C virus (HCV) are not known. Quality of life, psychological distress (Profile of Mood State scale), depression (Beck Depression Inventory), and coping (Ways of Coping scale) were prospectively assessed in 82 liver transplant candidates; comparisons were made between patients with HCV hepatitis versus patients with other liver diseases. Patients with HCV were significantly younger than all other patients (p = 0.002). Total mood disturbance (p = 0.038), tension and anxiety (0.047), confusion and bewilderment (p = 0.035) and depression and dejection (p = 0.035), as assessed by Profile of Mood States Scale were significantly higher in patients with HCV than other patients. Patients with HCV were significantly more depressed as assessed by Beck Inventory scores (p = 0.014). Karnofsky performance scores, Child-Pugh score, and liver function tests were not significantly different for patients with HCV vs. all other patients. However, somatic manifestations of the illness (e.g. pain) were greater in patients with HCV and may have contributed towards greater depression in these patients. Our findings warrant replication in other studies, since depression is a modifiable and treatable disorder.
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PMID:Vulnerability to psychologic distress and depression in patients with end-stage liver disease due to hepatitis C virus. 936 31

Patients with end-stage liver disease usually show a hyperdynamic circulatory state. It has previously been reported that patients who develop myocardial depression in the early post-liver transplantation period are more prone to organ failure and death. We reviewed the records of 754 adult patients undergoing liver transplantation at our institution and identified 7 patients who initially showed hyperdynamic circulation, but then developed reversible dilated cardiomyopathy in the early posttransplantation period. All identifiable causes of cardiac dysfunction, such as myocardial ischemia, thyroid dysfunction, and electrolyte imbalances, were excluded. Left ventricular ejection fraction decreased from a preoperative median baseline of 60% to 20% (P = .02), with four-chamber dilatation on echocardiogram. All these patients required supportive care, including mechanical ventilation, afterload reduction, inotropic support, and monitoring in the intensive care unit. Cardiac function subsequently improved in all patients, with ejection fraction increasing to a median of 50%. All patients were discharged from the hospital. At a median follow-up of 15 months, there was no recurrence of heart failure. The increased peripheral resistance seen after successful liver transplantation may be an important causative factor.
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PMID:Post-liver transplantation myocardial dysfunction. 972 77

Combination of HCV-infection and alcoholic liver disease is associated with enhancement of hepatocellular damage (lipid and hydropic degeneration become diffuse), a decrease of hepatocyte necrotic foci and lymphomacrophagal infiltration, an increase of hepatocyte apoptosis and liver fibrosis, absence of lymphoid follicles. An important role in the genesis of these liver alterations is attributed to the combination of viral and alcoholic factors with persistence of hepatitis C virus and liver reticulo-endothelial system depression.
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PMID:[Electron microscopic study of the liver in chronic viral hepatitis C complicated by alcoholic liver disease]. 985 14

Psychiatric outcome, quality of life, and alcohol consumption were compared between patients transplanted for alcoholic liver disease and those transplanted for other chronic liver diseases. Instruments used included the Clinical Interview Schedule, the 28-item General Health Questionnaire, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and the Nottingham Health Profile. There was no difference between the two groups with regard to median scores or "caseness" on these instruments, except for physical mobility on the Nottingham Health Profile, where the alcoholic group was more likely to experience difficulties (p = 0.03). The majority of those transplanted for alcoholic liver disease remained abstinent, although 7 of the 31 in the alcoholic group (23%) were drinking above recommended safe limits. Psychosocial outcome is similar for individuals transplanted for alcoholic liver disease and those transplanted for other chronic liver diseases. Patients should not be excluded from transplantation on grounds of their drinking history.
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PMID:Psychiatric and social outcome following liver transplantation for alcoholic liver disease: a controlled study. 1034 Feb 35

138 patients with end-stage kidney disease and 118 patients with end-stage liver disease were included in an observational cohort study regarding their quality of life. Instruments used were the Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), a scale for Activities of Daily Life (ADL), a Symptom Check List (SCL-90-R), and the Center of Epidemiology and Statistics Depression Scale (CES-D), all for self rating, as well as the indices of Spitzer and Karnofsky for foreign rating of life quality. Apart from the early postoperative period in both groups there was significant and persistent improvement in quality of life already three months after transplantation. In some dimensions, patients after kidney transplantation presented even lower trouble scores than a population sample. In addition, semistructured interviews showed clearly the need for psychotherapeutic support to guarantee the success for specific cases. The present investigation demonstrates, that systematic registration of the patients perception of illness and treatment is possible even in extreme situations and leads to a differentiated evaluation of medical procedures. Thereby the study also contributes to the development of modern evaluation research according to the spirit of evidence based medicine.
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PMID:[Changes in the quality of life after organ transplantations]. 1051 Aug 35

Cognitive impairment is common in patients with advanced liver disease. It has been suggested that patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD) have more impaired cognition than nonalcoholics. The objective of this study was to characterize any differences in cognitive functions between alcoholic cirrhotic patients and non-alcoholic cirrhotic patients of similar age, education, and severity of liver disease. We assessed cognitive functions in 117 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis and 163 patients with nonalcoholic cirrhosis using a brief battery of neuropsychological tests. In addition, all patients had standard psychiatric examinations to assess the effect of the disease severity, alcoholism, anxiety, and depression on the test scores. The study showed a higher proportion of patients with cognitive impairment in the alcoholic group. Alcoholics performed poorly in tests of memory and motor speed compared with nonalcoholics, despite similar premorbid IQ and education. Because patients with alcoholic cirrhosis had more severe liver disease (Child-Pugh score 8.5 +/- 2.2 vs. 7.6 +/- 2.2, P =.03) than nonalcoholics, the results were reanalyzed after adjusting for the linear effects of Child-Pugh score on cognitive test scores. We also used two-way analysis of variance to examine the interaction between Child class and alcoholism. Finally, the test scores were compared within each Child class. These analyses revealed no primary or interaction effect of alcoholism and confirmed that the differences in the test scores observed in alcoholics reflect the greater severity of their liver disease. The severity of cognitive impairment is similar in both alcoholic and non-alcoholic cirrhotic patients when adjusted for the severity of liver disease.
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PMID:Cognitive impairment in alcoholic and nonalcoholic cirrhotic patients. 1057 12

Post liver transplant recurrence of infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) occurs in approximately 50% of patients transplanted because of HCV-related liver disease. The aim of this study was to assess long-term quality of life, psychologic distress, and coping in patients with recurrent HCV after liver transplantation in comparison to patients transplanted for other etiologies of underlying liver disease. All liver transplant recipients transplanted at a University affiliated Veterans Affairs Medical Center who had greater than 6 months follow-up were sent a questionnaire investigating quality of life (assessed by Medical Outcomes study health survey SF-36), depression (assessed by Beck Depression Inventory), total mood disturbance (assessed by Profile of Mood States scale), coping (assessed by Billing and Moos Inventory of coping with illnesses), and employment status. Lower Beck Depression Inventory score (p = 0.001), lower mood disturbance score (p = 0.0001), overall satisfaction with present work (p = 0.0001), and lesser use of avoidant coping (p = 0.06) were predictors of better quality of life in long-term survivors of liver transplantation. At a mean follow-up of 4 yr after liver transplantation, patients with histopathologically diagnosed recurrent viral HCV hepatitis had significantly lower global quality of life score (mean score of 76.4 versus 86.2, p = 0.011) and physical functioning score (mean score 20 versus 25, p = 0.015), as compared to all other patients. In summary, quality of life and physical functioning were significantly impaired in liver transplant recipients with histopathologically diagnosed recurrent HCV hepatitis, as compared to those whose HCV hepatitis had not recurred or those transplanted for other reasons.
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PMID:Quality of life in long-term survivors after liver transplantation: impact of recurrent viral hepatitis C virus hepatitis. 1069 35

Recently published research contends that anxiety and depression are more common in asthmatic patients than in the general population. Particular psychological profiles could even be a risk factor contributing to deaths caused by asthma. The purpose of our research was to evaluate the anxiety and depression level in a population of 80 asthmatic patients who were treated in our department, and to judge whether data collected on psychological profiles of these asthmatic patients can be of any significance when dealing with their pathology. The study consisted of 40 patients suffering from chronic viral hepatitis B or C, and 40 healthy subjects who served as a control group. Both sets of patients were homogeneous with regard to sex, age and education. All subjects were tested for anxiety and depression levels with the S.T.A.I. and Zung questionnaires. A structured questionnaire was employed to assess the daily approach to living with the disease only in asthmatic patients. The anxiety and depression levels were noticeably higher in asthmatic patients than in patients with chronic liver disease and healthy subjects. In particular, 34 asthmatic patients scored higher than the S.T.A.I. cut-off (40/80) and 27 attained the same results in the Zung questionnaire. Results from the asthmatic population and healthy subjects illustrated that women had a higher incidence of anxiety and depression compared to men, although no statistically significant relationship between sex and questionnaire results was apparent in patients with liver disease. In the year before assessment, hospitalization and emergency treatment due to asthmatic exacerbation was correlated in females with a high incidence of anxiety. Additionally, the asthmatic population's level of education is significantly related to the incidence of anxiety and depression. With higher education, incidence of depression and anxiety decreased. This result was not apparent in control groups. The results of our study were: (1) we confirmed that asthmatic pathology is associated with an increase in incidence of anxiety and depression, whose presence and seriousness should be taken into consideration in therapeutic programmes when dealing with a patient; (2) we indicated that a specific approach towards therapy is crucial when dealing with an asthmatic patient; (3) we suggested how important it is to identify categories of patients that require more care because of their psychological profile. These findings should provide for the optimal use of informational resources with important applications for educational programmes and the future treatment of the asthmatic population.
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PMID:Psychological issues in the treatment of asthmatic patients. 1095 48

The authors in a cross-sectional study examined 113 patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) without widely progressed or decompensated liver disease. The patients were investigated for emotional state (depression, anxiety, coping styles) and somatic/sociodemographic variables. A high percentage of patients had positive scores for depression (22.4%) and anxiety (15.2%). Mode of acquisition (e.g., former drug abuse) and histological grade of liver damage had no significant influence on emotional state or coping strategies. Older patients (> or = 50 years) were significantly more depressed (P = 0.024). Patients with a recently diagnosed CHC (> 4 weeks, < 6 months) had significantly lower scores for depression (P = 0.003) and anxiety (P = 0.001) than the subgroup with a time interval since initial diagnosis of more than 5 years. Recently diagnosed CHC patients also showed the highest levels of problem-solving behavior. Patients who were advised not to undergo an interferon therapy were significantly more depressed (P = 0.001) and anxious (P = 0.028). Older patients with CHC and patients with a long period since CHC diagnosis or who were advised not to undergo interferon therapy should be carefully and regularly assessed for depression, anxiety, and inappropriate coping styles.
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PMID:Emotional state, coping styles, and somatic variables in patients with chronic hepatitis C. 1101 23


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