Can L-carnitine supplementation and exercise improve muscle complications in patients with liver cirrhosis who receive branched-chain amino acid supplementation?

Background The aim of this study was to elucidate the efficacy of the combination of L-carnitine and exercise, reported to prevent muscle wasting, for muscle complications (function, volume, and cramping) in patients with liver cirrhosis (LC) who received branched-chain amino acid supplementation. Materials and methods From December 2017 to April 2018, 18 patients with LC who had been given branched-chain amino acid granule supplementation (12.45 g/day) were enrolled (mean age 68.4±10.8 years; 10 males and eight females; Child–Pugh A : B=9 : 9). After evaluating the average number of daily steps, oral L-carnitine supplementation (1000 mg/day) and additional exercise (plus 2000 steps/day) were added for 6 months. Every 4 weeks, a pedometer, a hand dynamometer, ergometer, and bioelectrical impedance analysis were used to evaluate daily steps, muscle function and muscle volume, and muscle cramps were recorded using a numerical rating scale. Results Average steps and serum levels of total and free carnitine were increased from before treatment to the final measurement (1883.5±1211.6 vs. 3165.1±1800.0/day, 62.6±16.5 vs. 110.9±28.6 μmol/l, and 47.7±15.2 vs. 83.2±21.5 μmol/l, respectively; P
Source: European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology - Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Original Articles: Hepatology Source Type: research