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Deficiency, Incapacity and Social Disadvantage of Patients with Chronic Hepatitis B: a Case-control Study

Overview
Journal Tunis Med
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2022 Mar 9
PMID 35260999
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Abstract

Introduction: Studies examining impairment, disability and social disadvantage of patients with chronic viral hepatitis B (CHB) are scarce and present conflicting conclusions.

Aim: To assess the deficiency, incapacity, and social disadvantage of patients with CHB.

Methods: This is a project of a case-control study with two age-matched groups. Cases (n=27) will be untreated patients with a CHB. Controls (n=27) will be healthy participants. The following data will be collected: deficiency [anthropometric, biochemical (renal and hepatic functions, lipid balance, and inflammatory markers), haematological, virological, handgrip-strength, and spirometric data], incapacity [6-min walk distance, number of stops, oxy-haemoglobin saturation, dyspnoea (visual analogue scale), heart-rate, and blood-pressure] and social disadvantage ["chronic liver disease" and physical-activity questionnaires]. Each spirometric data < lower-limit-of-normal will be considered abnormal. A handgrip-strength <26 kg (male) or <16 kg (female) will be considered low. The signs of walking intolerance will be: stop during the walk, 6-min walk distance ≤ lower-limit-of-normal, dyspnoea at the end of the walk> 5/10, drop in oxy-haemoglobin saturation >5 points, heart-rate at the end of the walk ≤60%. A total physical-activity score <9.42 will classify the participant as sedentary.

Expected Results: Compared with controls, cases will have a marked alteration of submaximal aerobic data. These alterations will worsen quality-of-life and may be related to muscle and/or spirometric abnormalities, and supported by systemic inflammation and high viral load.

Citing Articles

Evaluation of muscle strength and quality in North African patients with chronic hepatitis B: A pilot case control study.

Bergaoui J, Latiri I, Chaouch H, Ben Abdallah J, Mrad S, Maatamri W Libyan J Med. 2023; 18(1):2204564.

PMID: 37096573 PMC: 10132249. DOI: 10.1080/19932820.2023.2204564.

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