For Patient
'I Don't Know Where the Money Went'
Prakash had been a careful man his whole life. As a retired bank officer from Nagpur, he had managed his own fixed deposits, tracked his pension disbursements, and kept meticulous records in a little navy notebook. His children called him 'the family CFO.'
Three years after his cirrhosis diagnosis, something shifted.
His wife noticed it first. Bills were being paid twice. One FD had lapsed because the renewal form sat untouched. The grocery budget was wildly off — not because he was spending more, but because he couldn't reconcile the numbers anymore. He'd start calculating something and just… stop. The numbers wouldn't come.
When his daughter gently asked if everything was okay, Prakash became upset. 'I'm not stupid,' he said. 'I know how numbers work.'
He did know — once. But his liver disease had been silently doing something to his brain that nobody had warned the family about.
The Brain Does the Math. The Liver Keeps the Brain Clean.
Here's something most people don't realize: the ability to handle numbers, calculate, plan ahead, and manage money is not just an intellectual skill. It's a neurological function — governed by the prefrontal cortex and other brain regions that require clean, toxin-free blood to function properly.
When liver disease prevents the proper filtering of ammonia from the bloodstream, that toxin crosses the blood-brain barrier. It interferes with how neurons fire and communicate. And some of the earliest, most subtle functions to be affected are:
• Mental arithmetic — adding, subtracting, tracking totals
• Working memory — holding numbers in mind while calculating
• Attention span — staying focused on a multi-step financial task
• Processing speed — how quickly the brain works through information
• Decision-making — weighing risks, comparing options, making choices
All of these are functions we use every day when we handle money.
What Does 'Mental Slowing' Actually Look Like at the Bank?
This is important, because these changes don't announce themselves. They creep in. Here are real-life scenarios that families and patients describe:
At the ATM
The person enters the PIN correctly but then stands there, uncertain what to do next. They withdraw money but can't recall the amount seconds later. They get flustered when someone is waiting behind them.
Paying Bills
Utility bills go unpaid — not because of financial trouble, but because the steps required to process, prioritize, and act on the bill feel overwhelming. Multiple tabs, account numbers, IFSC codes — the cognitive load becomes too much.
Managing Investments
Fixed deposits mature and go unrenewed. Mutual fund SIPs that were set up years ago are forgotten. Insurance premiums lapse. Pension forms require dates and figures the person can no longer hold in mind simultaneously.
Shopping and Daily Purchases
Change is miscounted. Overcharging isn't noticed. Impulsive purchases happen — not from desire, but because comparison and value-judgement become cognitively taxing.
Family Finances
The person who used to manage the household finances starts making errors. Income is not tracked. Expenses are duplicated. The family slowly, unknowingly, begins to absorb the financial management — often without understanding why.
Why This Happens: The Science in Simple Words
Imagine your brain's working memory as a small whiteboard. When you're calculating a bill — let's say, figuring out if you've been given the right change at the pharmacy — you write numbers on that whiteboard, do the subtraction, check the result, and erase it.
Now imagine that whiteboard keeps getting smudged. Numbers disappear mid-calculation. You can't hold the starting amount while you're doing the subtraction. The result doesn't quite make sense, but you're not sure why.
That smudging is what ammonia toxicity does to working memory. It doesn't erase what you know. It impairs the mental workspace you use to apply what you know in real time.
This is called working memory impairment, and it is one of the consistent findings in patients with Minimal Hepatic Encephalopathy (MHE).
The Real-World Financial Consequences Nobody Talks About
The stakes here are not abstract. When cognitive impairment from liver disease goes undetected, the financial consequences can be profound and lasting:
• Missed investment deadlines and lapses in financial instruments
• Signing documents without fully understanding their implications
• Vulnerability to financial fraud — patients with cognitive impairment are disproportionately targeted by scammers
• Inability to navigate insurance claims or hospital billing
• Making large financial decisions (property sales, loans, inheritances) while cognitively impaired
• Increased family financial burden as the patient can no longer contribute to household management
These are not hypothetical risks. These are the stories that play out quietly in hundreds of thousands of Indian homes — in middle-class families who think their biggest financial risk from liver disease is the medical bill.
The medical bill is the visible cost. The invisible cost is the loss of financial judgment.
A Word to Family Members and Caregivers
If you are the child, spouse, or sibling of someone with liver disease, you may have noticed some of this already. Perhaps you've stepped in to manage finances 'just for now.' Perhaps you've gently corrected errors without mentioning it, not wanting to embarrass your loved one.
Here is what we want you to know:
Your instinct to protect is right. But the most protective thing you can do is not quietly take over — it's to get your loved one evaluated by a hepatologist who understands the liver-brain connection.
Myths vs. Facts
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