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Long-term effect of liver transplantation on cirrhotic autonomic cardiac dysfunction.

There is little information on the long-term effect of liver transplantation (LT) on cardiac autonomic dysfunction in cirrhotic patients. We compared cardiac autonomic function before and in the long-term after LT. In a transversal study, we investigated 30 cirrhotics awaiting LT, 15 clinically stable patients 2-6 years after LT and 27 healthy controls. Seven cirrhotic patients were studied before LT, and 6, 12 and 33 months after LT, in a prospective fashion. Cardiac autonomic function was measured by heart rate variability (HRV) analysis during 24-h electrocardiogram recording. In the transversal study, patients with cirrhosis as compared to healthy controls had significantly reduced standard deviation of normal-to-normal RR intervals (SDNN) (p<0.001) and of the square root of the mean of squared differences between adjacent NN intervals (RMS-SD) (p<0.01), while the ratio between low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF) at night was significantly (p<0.05) increased. Liver transplanted patients had significantly (p<0.001) higher SDNN values than cirrhotics, while RMS-SD and LF/HF at night did not differ. In the prospective study, SDNN progressively increased after LT and was significantly (p<0.05) higher at 12 and 33 months, compared to the pre-operative value. RMS-SD and LF/HF at night did not change after LT. In conclusion, the overall HRV decrease present in cirrhosis, measured by SDNN values, is partially corrected in the long-term after LT. However, parasympathetic impairment, measured by RMS-SD and LF/HF at night, is not affected even in the long-term after operation.

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