# Thrombocytopenia and Grading of Esophageal Varices in Patients With Chronic Liver Disease

**Authors:** Muhammad Asad Abbas, Aamir Ali, Saad Bin Zafar, Adeel Ahmed, Muhammad Noman Qureshi, Khizra Hamid, Muhammad Irfan Jamil, Iqra Naeem

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.60826 · Cureus · 2024-05-22

## TL;DR

The study found that lower platelet counts in patients with chronic liver disease are linked to more severe esophageal varices.

## Contribution

This study demonstrates a strong inverse correlation between platelet count and esophageal variceal severity in CLD patients.

## Key findings

- Patients with Grade III esophageal varices had the lowest mean platelet count (78.54 ± 24.14 x 10³).
- There was a statistically significant difference in platelet counts across esophageal varice grades (P = 0.000).
- Platelet count inversely correlated with varice grading (r = -0.645, P < 0.000).

## Abstract

Background

Chronic liver disease (CLD) is associated with a variety of consequences, including thrombocytopenia and esophageal varices, which significantly impact patient prognosis and management. Thrombocytopenia, frequently observed in patients with CLD, may correlate with the severity of esophageal varices, a critical complication leading to variceal bleeding.

Methodology

A cross-sectional study was carried out in the Department of Medicine and Gastroenterology, Pak Emirates Military Hospital, Rawalpindi, from October 2021 to March 2022. The study enrolled 94 patients, aged 18-70 years, diagnosed with CLD, regardless of the cause. These patients were categorized into four groups based on platelet count: <50,000/uL, 50,000-99,999/uL, 100,000-150,000/uL, and >150,000/uL. Pearson's correlation was utilized to evaluate the association between the severity of thrombocytopenia and the grading of esophageal varices.

Results

A total of 94 patients were enrolled in the study, with 53 (56.4%) males and 41 (43.6%) females. The mean age of patients was 51.06 ±11.09 years. Seventeen (18.1%) had no esophageal varices, 16 (17.0%) were diagnosed with Grade I varices, 35 (37.2%) with Grade II varices, and 26 (27.7%) had Grade III varices. Most patients without varices had a platelet count above 150 x 103 (17, 18.1%). Conversely, most patients with Grade III varices (19, 20.2%) had platelet counts below 50 x 103. Patients with no esophageal varices had a mean platelet count of 173.70 ± 37.48 x 103. Among the patients, those with Grade III esophageal varices exhibited the lowest mean platelet count, recorded at 78.54 ± 24.14 x 103. These findings indicate a statistically significant difference in mean platelet counts across the various esophageal varices grades (P = 0.000). There was an inverse correlation of platelet count with the grading of esophageal varices (r = -0.645, P < 0.000).

Conclusions

A negative correlation was observed between the platelet count and the grading of esophageal varices, implying that as the severity of esophageal varices increased, the platelet counts proportionally decreased.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Esophageal varices (MONDO:0001221), Thrombocytopenia (MONDO:0002049)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Esophageal Varices (MESH:D004932), variceal bleeding (MESH:D014648), Thrombocytopenia (MESH:D013921), CLD (MESH:D008107)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

18 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11195516/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11195516