Hi, hope you are all coping OK. I just have a little query. I was diagnosed during covid lockdown and it was a complete shock. Fatty liver had only ever been mentioned as an aside when looking for other things. My latest letter from my consultant says "compensated Nash cirrhosis,
interpreting results: Hi, hope you are... - British Liver Trust
interpreting results
Your Dr should be the person to explain it to you.You certainly need to nurse your liver along and treat it gently.
As for "how close to being decompensated" nobody can estimate that.
The thing to aim for is to remain compensated!
Hi Sheperd, welcome aboard.
Sorry to hear about your diagnosis. Whilst we are not allowed to interpret specific results I'll try and help out with some of the terminology.
Decompensated cirrhosis isn't determined based on any score on the charts but by symptoms present. A compensated liver is able to carry on a lot of it's 500 functions but when it becomes decompensated it struggles with even tge ones essential for life. Symptoms of decompensated cirrhosis would include ascites +/- bleeding from varices.
Child Pugh score runs from A-C with A being at the less serious side of the score.
Meld/UKELD can give doctors an indication of potential transplant need and are calculated from blood test results.
NASH (Non Alcoholic Steatohepatitis) is the more agressive form of Non Alcohol Related Fatty Liver Disease. Your CAP score reflects a very fatty liver since CAP only scores up to 400.
kPa is the figure that reflects how fibrous your liver is and has given you your cirrhosis diagnosis. There is a chance that your kPa could potentially be falsly elevated to some degree since NASH indicates ingoing inflammation and fibroscan sometimes can't tell the difference between actual fibrous tissue and inflammation.
All us not lost however - if you can tackle the underlying cause then there is a chance your liver and all your scores can improve to a degree. The BLT has an excellent page all about NASH & NAFLD which provides guidance resources on what you can do to help your condition. britishlivertrust.org.uk/in...
Katie
Thank you for your response. Really helpful. My liver was finally tipped over the edge by medication I had been on for several years for an unrelated condition. Lover dr insisted I be taken off that med and I haven't been on it since diagnosis but unfortunately that means that my other condition isn't being treated as effectively. I have queried whether it is true cirrhosis (after finding out in January I had been treated for a form of blood cancer for 10 years, which they have now said was misdiagnosed. I think I am looking for more definite answers than can be given but I just like to plan for eventualities before they arise.
Obviously you need a very thorough chat with your liver doctor to establish exactly what is going on.
Still - all isn't lost. My hubby was diagnosed with decompensated cirrhosis with a massive bleed from varices in April 2012 (due to auto immune liver disease). In 2014 he was assessed and listed for transplant and delisted after 10 months because his situation improved. All these years later he remains stable and we are just back from a 4 week caravan holiday where we did 335 miles riding our e-mountain bikes in the North York Moors and Yorkshire Dales. He is monitored regularly by his liver doctors and keeps generally well (not 100% fit and well by any means but living his best possible life).
Katie