1. Diagnosing ascites: Value of ascitic fluid total protein, albumin, cholesterol, their ratios, serum-ascites albumin and cholesterol gradient
- Author
-
Sandeep Kumar, Gupta Sc, S. P. Misra, R. K. Gupta, Manisha Dwivedi, and V. Misra
- Subjects
Liver Cirrhosis ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Cirrhosis ,Serum albumin ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Gastroenterology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Albumins ,Internal medicine ,Ascites ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Ascitic Fluid ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Serum Albumin ,Ascitic fluid ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Cholesterol ,Liver Neoplasms ,Albumin ,Proteins ,Blood Proteins ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Liver Failure - Abstract
Ascitic fluid total protein, albumin, cholesterol, their ascites/serum ratios, serum-ascites albumin and cholesterol gradients were measured for their ability to differentiate cirrhotic, malignant and tuberculous ascites in 76 patients. The mean +/- s.d. ascitic fluid total protein, albumin, cholesterol, their respective ascitic fluid/serum ratios in cirrhotic ascites were lower than malignant and tuberculous groups (P < 0.001 for each). The difference between malignant and tuberculous groups was significant for ascitic fluid/serum total protein (P < 0.05) and ascitic fluid/serum albumin (P < 0.01) only. Mean serum-ascites albumin gradient in cirrhotics was higher than in the malignant and tuberculous groups (P < 0.001 for each). The difference between malignant and tuberculous groups was significant (P < 0.01). Mean +/- s.d. serum-ascites cholesterol gradient in cirrhotics was higher than that in malignant and tuberculous groups (P < 0.001 for each). The difference between malignant and tuberculous groups was also significant (P < 0.01). Both serum/ascitic fluid total protein less than 0.5 and ascitic fluid cholesterol less than 55 mg/dL had 94% diagnostic accuracy for differentiating cirrhotic from malignant and tuberculous differentiating cirrhotic from malignant and tuberculous ascites. Serum ascitic fluid albumin gradient greater than 1.1 g/dL, ascitic fluid/serum albumin less than 0.65 and ascitic fluid albumin less than 2 g/dL had diagnostic accuracy of 92, 92 and 91%, respectively. Ascitic fluid total protein had diagnostic accuracy of 88%. None of the tests was able to differentiate between malignant and tuberculous ascites. Measurement of ascitic fluid cholesterol concentration is a simple method of differentiating cirrhotic from non-cirrhotic ascites.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF