Treatable Condition Misdiagnosed as Dementia in Almost 13% of Cases
From the American Journal of Medicine
‘Easy to Miss’
Commenting on the research, Nancy Reau, MD, section chief of hepatology at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said that it is easy for physicians to miss asymptomatic liver disease that could progress and lead to cognitive decline.
“Most of my patients are already labeled with liver disease; however, it is not uncommon to receive a patient from another specialist who felt their presentation was more consistent with liver disease than the issue they were referred for,” she said.
Still, even in metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease, which affects nearly one third of the population, the condition isn’t advanced enough in most patients to cause symptoms similar to those of dementia, said Dr. Reau, who was not associated with the study.
“It is more important for specialists in neurology to exclude liver disease and for hepatologists or gastroenterologists to be equipped with tools to exclude alternative explanations for neurocognitive presentations,” she said. “It is important to not label a patient as having HE and then miss alternative explanations.”
“Every presentation has a differential diagnosis. Using easy tools like FIB-4 can make sure you don’t miss liver disease as a contributing factor in a patient that presents with neurocognitive symptoms,” Dr. Reau said.
This work was partly supported by grants from Department of Veterans Affairs merit review program and the National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Advancing Translational Science. Dr. Bajaj and Dr. Reau reported no conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.