Week 2.11 - Hepato-Biliary Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the functions of the liver?

A
  • protein synthesis
  • bile synthesis
  • metabolism
  • detoxification
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2
Q

Why cant the liver store bile?

A

doesn’t have correct epithelial lining - needs mucous secreting like in gallbladder. bile will damage cells if not stored correctly due to toxicity

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3
Q

What are 5 pathologies of the liver?

A
  • liver failure
  • jaudice
  • intrahepatic bile duct obstruction
  • cirrhosis
  • tumours
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4
Q

Why does liver failure cause oedema in abdomen?

A

abnormal liver function, no albumin protein made so osmotic pressure effected - water not pushed back into blood stream

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5
Q

What is liver failure?

A

a complication of an acute liver injury, which leads to chronic liver injury, and cirrhosis.

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6
Q

What are some acute liver injuries?

A

hepatitis or bile duct obstruction

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7
Q

What are some causes of hepatitis and types?

A

may be viral, alcohol, drugs…

A and E are from feco-oral food bourne
B and C are from lifestyle.

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8
Q

What does hepatitis lead to?

A

inflammation of liver, leading to oedema, swelling, physical pressure, low pH, cells cant function so they die.

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9
Q

What are the 3 outcomes of hepatitis?

A
  • complete resolution, common in A and E
  • liver failure
  • chronic hepatitis/cirrhosis
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10
Q

What is alcohol liver disease?

A

response to excess alcohol. see steatohepatitis (fatty change), causing acute inflammation, liver cell failure and death. can progress to cirrhosis.

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11
Q

What are 3 types of jaundice?

A

pre-hepatic, hepatic and post hepatic causes

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12
Q

What causes pre-hepatic jaundice?

A

increased haemoglobin from erythrocytes to break down - too much to break down in spleen. occurs in infections, drugs, fever

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13
Q

What causes hepatic jaundice?

A

intra-hepatic bile blockage (cholestasis) whether in hepatocytes or bile canaliculi,

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14
Q

What causes cholestasis?

A

viral hepatitis, alcoholic hepatitis, liver failure, drugs (commonly oral contraceptive)

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15
Q

What causes post-hepatic jaundice?

A
  • cholelithiasis (gallstones),
  • disease of gallbladder and
  • extra-hepatic obstruction
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16
Q

What are risk factors for gallstones?

A

obesity and diabetes

17
Q

What is cholecystitis?

A

inflammation of gallbladder, usually by gallstone blocking cystic duct. can be acute or chronic

18
Q

What is cholecystitis vs cholangitsis?

A

inflammation of gallbladder vs inflammation of bile system

19
Q

acute vs chronic cholecystitis?

A

acute is urgent - sharp pain. caused by gallstone blockage generally.
chronic is swelling over time, hypertrophy of gallbladder due to stone causing high pressure over time. may lead to rupture.

19
Q

What are 3 tumours of the hepatobilliary system??

A
  • hepatocellular carcinoma (of hepatocytes)
  • cholangiocarcinoma (of bile ducts)
  • metastatic tumours from elsewhere
20
Q

What are 2 intrahepatic bile duct obstruction diseases?

A
  • PBC primary biliary cholangitis
  • PSC primary sclerosing cholangitis
21
Q

What is PBC?

A

primary biliary cholangitis
9x more in women. autoimmune organ specific - antimitochondrial auto-antibodies sent to bile ducts and inflammation, destroying ducts. leads to cirrhosis. bile damages liver cells

22
Q

What is PSC?

A

primary sclerosing cholangitis
more common in men.
chronic inflamamton with plasma cells and lymphocytes, fibrous obliteration of bile ducts, progress to cirrhosis. increased risk of cholangiocarcinoma.

23
Q

How can we detect PBC?

A

raised serum alkaline phosphatase on liver function tests

24
Q

What is hepatic cirrhosis?

A

end stage chronic liver disease. irreversable damage following fibrotic scarring and loss of function.

25
Q

What are causes of hepatic cirrhosis?

A
  • autoimmune diseases (PBC and PSC),
  • alcohol,
  • hep B+C,
  • also metabolic disorder like excess iron or excess copper
26
Q

What causes excess iron and excess copper?

A
  • iron - too much bilirubin so increased risk of damage
  • copper - wilsons disease, cant digest copper so accumulates
27
Q

What does diffuse mean?

A

involves whole liver.

28
Q

What are complications of hepatic cirrhosis?

A
  • liver failure
  • abnormal blood flow - portal hypertension
  • increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma