1. Dysgeusia in MASLD-related advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD): a silent driver towards the 'Bermuda' triangle of malnutrition-sarcopenia-frailty severely affecting prognosis
- Author
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Marcello Dallio, Mario Romeo, Fiammetta Di Nardo, Carmine Napolitano, Paolo Vaia, Giorgia Iadanza, Simone Olivieri, Annachiara Coppola, Marco Niosi, and Alessandro Federico
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Nutrition ,Liver cirrhosis ,Sarcopenia ,Frailty ,Translational Medicine ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Background Dysgeusia is a distortion of the sense of taste whose prevalence and relationship with nutritional status in Metabolic dysfunction-associated Steatotic Liver Disease (MASLD)-related advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD) have never been systematically explored. Methods 200 MASLD patients [60 ≤ F3 fibrosis, 70 compensated ACLD (cACLD), and 70 decompensated (dACLD)] were enrolled. At baseline, the Child–Pugh (CP) score was determined. Dietary habits, body composition, and frailty were evaluated. The European Working Group (EWGSOP2) criteria defined sarcopenia. Dysgeusia was assessed by the Dysgeusia-Total-Score (DTS). A visual analog scale identified appetite impairment (VASAI). During a 6-month follow-up, liver-related decompensation events (LRDEs) were recorded. Results The prevalence of dysgeusia increased with the liver disease progression, appearing significantly higher in ACLD compared with ≤ F3 (65.7% vs 5%, p:0.003), as well as in dACLD compared to cACLD patients (58.5 vs 7.1% p
- Published
- 2025
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