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Prevention of First Decompensation in Advanced Chronic Liver Disease

Mattias Mandorfer, Benedikt Simbrunner

2021Clinics in Liver Disease46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The first occurrence of decompensation constitutes a watershed moment in the natural history of chronic liver disease; it denotes a point of no return in a relevant proportion of patients. Preventive strategies may profoundly decrease cirrhosis-related morbidity and mortality. Removing the primary etiologic factor and cofactors, is key; however, a considerable proportion of patients require additional etiology-independent treatment strategies that target important pathomechanisms promoting decompensation (ie, portal hypertension and systemic inflammation). This article explains the importance of preventing first decompensation and summarizes the evidence for etiologic and etiology-independent (most important, nonselective beta-blockers and statins) therapies.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDecompensationEtiologyCirrhosisNatural historyChronic liver diseaseIntensive care medicineDiseaseLiver diseasePortal hypertensionInternal medicineLiver Disease and TransplantationLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentDrug-Induced Hepatotoxicity and Protection
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