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Apex Nursing

Reference — Gastrointestinal

Hepatic Encephalopathy

Quick reference for hepatic encephalopathy — causes, ammonia metabolism, asterixis, West Haven grading system, lactulose therapy, and nursing management priorities.

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Clinical decisions require licensed professional judgment and institutional protocols. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Definition & Pathophysiology

Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neuropsychiatric syndrome resulting from the accumulation of toxins — primarily ammonia (NH₃) — that the failing liver cannot metabolize through the urea cycle.

StepNormal ProcessIn Liver Failure
Ammonia productionGut bacteria break down proteins and amino acids → produce NH₃Same — continues regardless of liver function
Portal absorptionNH₃ absorbed from colon into portal blood → delivered to liverSame — NH₃ enters portal circulation normally
Urea cycle (hepatic)Liver converts NH₃ → urea → excreted in urineUrea cycle impaired — NH₃ accumulates in bloodstream
Brain effectsNegligible — blood-brain barrier typically prevents NH₃ entryNH₃ crosses blood-brain barrier → astrocyte swelling, glutamine accumulation → cerebral edema and neurological dysfunction

Precipitating Causes

Any condition that increases the protein/ammonia load or impairs hepatic function can precipitate HE. Identifying and treating the precipitant is the first treatment priority.

PrecipitantMechanism
GI bleedBlood in GI tract is digested as protein → massive ammonia production
Infection (SBP, UTI, pneumonia)Systemic inflammation impairs hepatic function; cytokines directly affect blood-brain barrier
ConstipationProlonged colonic transit increases ammonia absorption from stool
Diuretic-induced electrolyte imbalanceHypokalemia and alkalosis promote NH₃ conversion from NH₄⁺ (ionized, non-crossing form)
Sedatives/benzodiazepines/opioidsCNS depressants act synergistically with ammonia toxicity
DehydrationReduced renal clearance of ammonia; concentrated portal blood
High-protein intakeSubstrate for ammonia production increases
Portosystemic shunts (TIPS)Blood bypasses liver → ammonia not cleared → HE risk increases post-TIPS
Azotemia/renal failureImpaired renal ammonia excretion → elevated serum ammonia

Asterixis

Asterixis (flapping tremor or “liver flap”) is the hallmark neurological sign of hepatic encephalopathy and is caused by brief lapses in postural muscle tone.

How to Test

  • Ask patient to extend arms out in front with wrists dorsiflexed (hands up like stopping traffic)
  • Hold position for 15–30 seconds
  • Positive: sudden brief flapping or flapping tremor of the hands (like a bird flapping wings)
  • Can also test with eyes closed and tongue protruded

Clinical Significance

  • Indicates metabolic encephalopathy (ammonia, CO2 retention, uremia)
  • Present in Grade 1–2 HE; may be absent in Grade 3–4 (too obtunded to cooperate)
  • Also seen in CO2 retention, uremia, drug toxicity — not specific to liver disease alone
  • Document as present/absent with description

West Haven Grading System

GradeConsciousnessCognition & BehaviorNeurological Signs
Grade 0 (Minimal HE)NormalSubtle impairment detectable only by psychometric testing (number connection test)None clinically apparent; may have subtle motor slowing
Grade 1 (Mild)Mild reduction in awarenessShortened attention span, mild forgetfulness, mild disorientation, sleep-wake inversionMild asterixis (flapping tremor); impaired handwriting
Grade 2 (Moderate)Lethargy, moderate reduction in alertnessObvious disorientation, inappropriate behavior, moderate personality changeObvious asterixis; dysarthria, ataxia; fetor hepaticus (musty sweet breath)
Grade 3 (Severe)Somnolent but arousable; confused when awakeProfound disorientation, bizarre behavior, difficulty following commandsAsterixis may be absent (too obtunded to cooperate); clonus, rigidity, hyperreflexia
Grade 4 (Coma)Unresponsive — no purposeful response to stimuliCannot be assessedDecerebrate or decorticate posturing; pupillary changes in severe cases; cerebral edema risk

Lactulose Therapy

Lactulose (Enulose, Generlac) is the first-line pharmacologic treatment for hepatic encephalopathy.

MechanismLactulose is metabolized by colonic bacteria to lactic acid and acetic acid → acidifies the colon → converts NH₃ (non-ionized, absorbable) to NH₄⁺ (ionized, non-absorbable, trapped in stool) → eliminated in feces. Also acts as osmotic laxative to speed transit and ammonia excretion.
Typical dosePO/NG: 20–30 g (30–45 mL) q1–4h initially; titrate to 2–4 soft bowel movements per day. Rectal enema: 300 mL lactulose + 700 mL water — for patients unable to take orally.
Therapeutic goal2–4 soft bowel movements per day. Not diarrhea (excessive diarrhea causes dehydration and electrolyte imbalance, worsening HE).
MonitoringStool frequency and consistency. Electrolytes — hyponatremia, hypokalemia risk with excessive use. Signs of dehydration with over-treatment.
Side effectsFlatulence, abdominal cramping, diarrhea (dose-dependent). Nausea and bloating on initiation. Aspiration risk in obtunded patients.

Nursing Considerations

Safety: fall and aspiration precautions

Confused patients are at high fall risk. Side rails up, bed in lowest position, call bell in reach. Assess gag reflex before any oral intake. Head-of-bed elevation ≥30° for Grade 3–4 HE.

Neurological assessments every 4 hours

Document orientation (person, place, time, situation), behavioral changes, asterixis, speech quality. Use consistent scale (West Haven Criteria). Report worsening of any grade to provider.

Lactulose administration and monitoring

Administer as ordered. Target 2–4 soft stools per day. Document stool frequency, consistency, and color. Excessive diarrhea causes dehydration and electrolyte loss — contact provider.

Identify and treat precipitating cause

Search for GI bleed (melena, hematemesis), infection (CBC, UA, blood cultures per order), constipation, medication culprits. Treating the precipitant often improves HE without additional interventions.

Medication review — avoid CNS depressants

Avoid benzodiazepines, opioids, and other CNS depressants in HE — synergistic toxicity. Flumazenil may reverse benzodiazepine-induced HE. For agitation: low-dose haloperidol is sometimes used with caution.

Nutrition — moderate protein, not zero protein

Protein restriction <0.5 g/kg/day is harmful and no longer recommended. Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) are preferred protein source. Small frequent meals. Nocturnal snack reduces catabolism. Zinc supplementation often prescribed.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) / AGA · ASPEN (nutrition support). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →