Gut Liver.  2012 Jul;6(3):355-361.

Effect of a Diet with Unrestricted Sodium on Ascites in Patients with Hepatic Cirrhosis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Liver Disease, Wuxi Hospital for Infectious Diseases, Wuxi, China. gxb188681@sina.com
  • 2Department of Internal Chinese Medicine, Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, Nanjing, China.

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIMS
There has been debate on whether a sodium-restricted diet (SRD) should be used in cirrhotic patients with ascites in China in recent years. The purpose of this study was to compare the effect of sodium-restricted and unrestricted diets on plasma renin activity (PRA), renal blood flow (RBF) and ascites in patients with liver cirrhosis.
METHODS
Two hundred cirrhotic patients with ascites were randomly divided into two groups (98 cases in the sodium-unrestricted diet [SUD] group and 102 cases in the SRD group); 95 patients (96.94%) in the SUD group and 97 patients (95.1%) in the SRD group had post-hepatitis B cirrhosis.
RESULTS
Blood sodium and RBF were higher in SUD group than in SRD group (p<0.001), while PRA were significantly lower in SUD group than the SRD group 10 days after treatment (p<0.001). Renal impairment caused by low blood sodium was higher in SRD group than in SUD group (p<0.01). Ascites disappeared in higher proportion of patients in SUD group than in SRD group (p<0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
SUD can increase the level of blood sodium and RBF, and be beneficial to diuresis and ascite reduction and disappearance.

Keyword

Liver cirrhosis; Ascites; Sodium-unrestricted diet; Albumin; Renal circulation

MeSH Terms

Ascites
China
Diet
Diet, Sodium-Restricted
Diuresis
Humans
Liver
Liver Cirrhosis
Plasma
Renal Circulation
Renin
Sodium
Renin
Sodium
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