Acute Cholangitis, Alc Hep, Anal Fissure, Appendicitis, Autoimmune hep, Barret's Flashcards

1
Q

What is Charcot’s Triad?

A

Fever, Jaundice, RUQ pain

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2
Q

What are the most common causes?

A

Choledocholithiasis (stones in the biliary tree) and benign + malignant strictures

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3
Q

What are some diagnostic factors?

A

RUQ pain/tenderness
Jaundice
Pruritus
Pale stools
Hypotension
Mental status changes

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4
Q

What are risk factors for AC?

A

Age >50
Cholelithiasis
Strictures

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5
Q

What are 1st investigations for AC?

A

Serum urea, creatinine, ABG (acidosis suspecting sepsis), FBC

Consider abdominal CT with IV contrast/MRCP/Percutanrous transhepatic cholangiography

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6
Q

What is treatment for AC?

A
  1. IV antibiotics + intensive medical management
  2. Biliary decompression via ERCP if patient is worsening
    PTC if poor candidate for ERCP (e.g., status post-Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, presence of oesophageal stricture)
  3. Biliary decompression surgically with laparoscopic choledochotomy with T-tube placement or cholecystectomy with common bile duct exploration
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7
Q

What drug is used as an alcohol detox in hospital?

A

Chlordiazepoxide to help withdrawal (generously first 3 days and then wean off over a week)

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8
Q

What drugs can be used to prevent alcohol relapse?

A

Acamprosate and metronidazole - cause acetaldehyde buildup so any alcohol ingestion will cause unpleasant side effects like headaches, flushing, palpitations.

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9
Q

What are the CAGE questions?

A

C: Ever felt like cutting down on drinking?
A: Have people annoyed you by criticising your drinking?
G: Have you ever felt guilty about your drinking?
E: Ever had an eye-opener in the morning?

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10
Q

How would a patient with alcoholic hepatitis present?

A

With malaise, increased TPR, AST:ALT>2, tender hepatomegaly and jaundice, low WBC and platelets due to toxicity/hypersplenism

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11
Q

How is alcoholic hepatitis treated?

A
  1. If ascites, ascitic tap, screen for infection and SBP
  2. Stop alcohol
  3. Maddrey discriminant factor takes patient’s PT and bilirubin into account - if over 31 and encephalopthy present, give prednisolone
  4. Vitamin K and thiamine
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12
Q

What indicates anal fissure?

A

Fresh red blood on wiping
Tearing sensation on passing stool
Sentinel pile present
Visible fissure

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13
Q

How are anal fissures treated?

A

Glyceryl trinitrate topically or diltiazem
If resistant/chronic:
Botulinum toxin A
Surgical sphincterectomy/anal advancement flap

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14
Q

How does appendicitis usually present?

A

Acute abdominal pain starting in the mid-abdomen and later localising to the right lower quadrant. Associated with fever, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and elevation of the neutrophil count.

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15
Q

What is appendicitis usually caused by?

A

Obstruction of the lumen of the appendix (by faecolith, normal stool, infective agents, or lymphoid hyperplasia)

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16
Q

How is uncomplicated appendicitis in adults managed?

A

Supportive treatment: Keep patient nil by mouth with maintenance fluids if surgery being considered + paracetamol/morphine sulfate
Prophylactic antibiotics with laparoscopic appendicectomy within 24 hours

17
Q

What are potential complications of appendicitis?

A

Perforation, acutely unwell, abscess/phlegmon

18
Q

What are symptoms of autoimmune hepatitis?

A

Fever, malaise, urticarial rash, polyarthritis, glomerulonephritis

19
Q

What are risk factors of autoimmune hepatitis?

A

Female sex, Genetic predisposition, immune dysregulation

20
Q

What would tests indicate in autoimmune hepatitis?

A

Elevated LFTs, hypergammaglobulinaemia, positive autoantibodies, liver biopsy shows mononuclear infiltrates of portal and periportal areas
MRCP helps exclude PSC if ALP disproportionately elevated

21
Q

What are the 2 types of autoimmune hepatitis?

A

Type 1: ASMA (anti smooth muscle antibody) + ANA (antinuclear antibody) positive with good response to immunosuppression and presenting with cirrhosis
Type 2: LKM1 antibody positive (anti-liver/kidney microsomal type 1) with ASMA and ANA negative - more common in children and worse prognosis

22
Q

What is the definition of severe AIH and how is it treated?

A

Acute severe AIH as patients presenting with jaundice, international normalised ratio >1.5 to <2, no encephalopathy, and no previously recognised liver disease.

60mg prednisolone OD and taper as per response