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Hepatic Encephalopathy is Associated With Slow Speech on Objective Assessment

Patricia P. Bloom, Jessica Robin, Mengdan Xu, Ashwini Arvind, Michael Daidone, Anoopum S. Gupta, Raymond T. Chung

2021The American Journal of Gastroenterology21 citationsDOI

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: There are no available low-burden, point-of-care tests to diagnose, grade, and predict hepatic encephalopathy (HE). METHODS: We evaluated speech as a biomarker of HE in 76 English-speaking adults with cirrhosis. RESULTS: Three speech features significantly correlated with the following neuropsychiatric scores: speech rate, word duration, and use of particles. Patients with low neuropsychiatric scores had slower speech (22 words/min, P = 0.01), longer word duration (0.09 seconds/word, P = 0.01), and used fewer particles (0.85% fewer, P = 0.01). Patients with a history of overt HE had slower speech (23 words/min, P = 0.005) and longer word duration (0.09 seconds/word, P = 0.005). DISCUSSION: HE is associated with slower speech.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineWord (group theory)Duration (music)AudiologyEncephalopathyCirrhosisInternal medicineLinguisticsArtPhilosophyLiteratureLiver Disease and TransplantationHepatitis C virus researchEpilepsy research and treatment
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