Gut Dysbiosis, Malnutrition and Sarcopenia in Liver Cirrhosis: A Narrative Review
Marian-Vlad Lăpădat, Claudia Georgeta Iacobescu, Ion Daniel Baboi, Maria Nedelcu, Lavinia Alice Bălăceanu, Valeria Ioana Grigorescu, Ion Dina

TL;DR
This review explores how gut problems, poor nutrition, and muscle loss are connected in liver cirrhosis patients, affecting their health and outcomes.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive synthesis of the interplay between gut dysbiosis, malabsorption, and sarcopenia in liver cirrhosis.
Findings
Gut dysbiosis and intestinal dysfunction contribute to malnutrition and muscle wasting in cirrhosis.
Sarcopenia is strongly linked to poor prognosis and transplant outcomes in cirrhotic patients.
The gut-liver-muscle axis represents a key area for future therapeutic interventions.
Abstract
Liver cirrhosis represents the end stage of chronic liver disease arising from diverse etiologies and is characterized by persistent hepatic injury, architectural distortion, extensive fibrosis, and nodular regeneration. While decompensated cirrhosis is commonly associated with overt, life-threatening complications such as hepatic encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome and gastrointestinal bleeding, less apparent manifestations—including sarcopenia and metabolic disturbances—have emerged as major determinants of prognosis. Sarcopenia, defined by the progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass and function, is highly prevalent in cirrhotic patients and is closely linked to frailty, increased morbidity, mortality, and adverse liver transplantation outcomes. Increasing data support the role of gastrointestinal dysfunction in the pathogenesis of sarcopenia in liver cirrhosis. In chronic liver…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · Liver Disease and Transplantation · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology
