Correlation of Severity of Esophageal Varices with Platelet Count in Patients Of Chronic Liver Disease
Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to ascertain if the platelet count of individuals with decompensated CLD and the grading of their esophageal varices were correlated.Methods
This study used non-probability purposive sampling to undertake a descriptive cross-sectional analysis. There were 150 individuals with decompensated liver cirrhosis in all. Each patient received an endoscopy to grade their esophageal varices, and a platelet count was performed on each one. The spearman's rank-C correlation approach was utilized to establish correlation.Results
 38.3% of patients with platelets count < 50,000/mm3 and 61.7% of patients with third grade esophageal varices were found in this group of patients. Of the patients whose platelet counts ranged from 51,000 to 99,000/mm3, 28.1% had second-grade esophageal varices, and 40.6% had third-grade varices. In patients with a platelet count between 100,000 and 149,00/mm3, second- and third-grade esophageal varices affected 17.9% and 23.1% of patients, respectively. With a p-value of less than 0.001, the Spearman's rank correlation test showed a negative relationship between platelet count and esophageal varices' grading.Conclusion
 This research shows a statistically significant negative correlation between the grading of esophageal varices and platelet count. As a result, in scenarios when endoscopic resources are unavailable, the platelet count could serve as a predictor of esophageal varices.Keywords:
Chronic liver disease, WHO Esophageal varicesPublished
2024/06/07
Issue
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 4.0 International License .
This is an open-access journal and all the published articles / items are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution BY-NC 4.0 License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. For comments psimjournal@gmail.com