Heart rate variability is associated with encephalopathy and outcomes in pediatric acute liver failure.
Tricia R PendergrastCatherine A ChapinAlyssa A KriegermeierAndrea C PardoLee M BassLazaro Nelson Sanchez-PintoPublished in: Pediatric research (2022)
The findings of our study suggest that heart rate variability is associated with clinical outcomes in children with acute liver failure, a cohort for which prognostics are challenging, especially in young children and infants. Use of heart rate variability in the clinical setting may facilitate earlier detection of children with pediatric acute liver failure (PALF) at high risk for severe hepatic encephalopathy and poor outcomes. Identification of children with PALF at high risk of decompensation may assist clinicians in making decisions about liver transplantation, an important, but resource-limited, treatment of PALF.