European Journal of Internal Medicine
Volume 21, Issue 2 , Pages 62-64, April 2010

The coagulopathy of chronic liver disease: Is there a causal relationship with bleeding? Yes

Prima Clinica Medica, Sapienza-University of Rome, Italy

Received 22 December 2009; received in revised form 8 January 2010; accepted 12 January 2010. published online 19 February 2010.

Abstract 

Variceal hemorrhage is a major cause of death in patients with cirrhosis. Much still could be performed in clinical practice to reduce the risk for bleeding in cirrhotic patients and accurate predictive rules should be provided for early recognition of high-risk patients. Liver cirrhosis patients present a complex hemostatic dysfunction with prolongation of bleeding time, chronic coagulation activation, and secondary hyperfibrinolysis. Therefore, liver failure determines an acquired coagulopathy that has been considered to be one potential underlying mechanism of bleeding. Endotoxemia may play a pivotal role in activating clotting system in portal and systemic circulation and it could represent a common mechanism accounting for portal vein thrombosis, systemic hyperfibrinolysis and eventually gastrointestinal bleeding. Nevertheless, clinical trials should also be planned to investigate the causal relationship between acquired coagulopathy and bleeding in patients with chronic liver disease.

Keywords: Cirrhosis, Bleeding, Variceal hemorrhage, Hyperfibrinolysis, Endotoxemia

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PII: S0953-6205(10)00008-7

doi:10.1016/j.ejim.2010.01.005

European Journal of Internal Medicine
Volume 21, Issue 2 , Pages 62-64, April 2010