Week 3.5 - Alcohol Related Liver Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are some alcohol related liver diseases?

A
  • hepatic encephalopathy
  • spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
  • alcoholic hepatitis (specific to alcohol)
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2
Q

How is alcohol toxic to the liver?

A
  • acetaldehyde is toxic and carcinogenic, causing flushing and diarrhoea.
  • also forms foreign compounds with macromolecules, causing immune response of neutrophil infiltration
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3
Q

What causes variation in our abilities to metabolise alcohol?

A
  • men better
  • certain cultures
  • genetics
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4
Q

How is alcohol metabolised?

A

oxidative metabolism from ethanol to acetaldehyde by alcohol dehydrogenase. then this is broken to acetate by acetaldehyde dehydrogenase

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5
Q

What is the issue with excess alcohol consumption?

A
  • metabolism pathway is saturated so alcohol broken down by other pathways producing excess lipids, lactic acids and ketones as a product.
  • gluconeogenesis is also impaired so glycogen cant break down - hyperglycaemia.
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6
Q

How does alcoholic liver progress?

A

steatosis, steatohepatitis, cirrosis, fibrosis,

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7
Q

What is the CAGE questionnaire?

A

to determine if someone is an alcoholic
- ever felt need to Cut down?
- Annoyed at being asked about it?
- Guilty?
- Eyeopener drink first thing in morning?

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8
Q

What scoring systems are used to see if an individual is at risk of harmful drinking?

A

FAST and AUDIT.
- FAST if 3+ do audit

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9
Q

What are symptoms of alcohol related liver disease?

A

most have no symptoms until advanced stage. symptoms of liver disease like
- spider nave,
- palmar erythema,
- ascites,
- muscle wasting
- jaundice,

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10
Q

What LFT’s do we look at to indicate alcohol related liver disease? (3+1)

A
  • AST/ALT (AST higher)
  • Gamma GT higher
  • thrombocytopenia (low platalets)
  • ultrasound show fatty liver but not specific to alcohol related
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11
Q

Why do we see hepatic encephalopathy in alcohol patients?

A

ammonia no longer broken down efficiently. toxins and metabolites in blood and bowel barrier broken so ammonia from bacteria passes.

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12
Q

How do you grade and treat hepatic encephalopathy in alcohol patients?

A
  • grade 1-4 from mild confusion to coma
  • give antibiotics, look for cranial bleed, bowel clearance, may need intensive care due to consciousness
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13
Q

What is Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis? symptoms?

A
  • not specific to alcohol but common
  • infected ascites.
  • sepsis, tachycardia, fever, pain
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14
Q

How do you test for Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis?

A
  • fluids ascites tap
  • white count above 0.25
  • low protein
  • cultures for bug
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15
Q

How do you treat Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis?

A
  • IV antibiotics
  • ascites drainage
  • IV albumin to reduce ascites
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16
Q

What is Alcoholic Hepatitis presentation?

A

present with
- jaundice,
- encephalopathy,
- decompensation symptoms
- infection

17
Q

How do you diagnose alcoholic hepatitis?

A
  • raised bilirubin, GGT, AlkP.
  • alcohol history
  • exclude other causes of jaundice like obstruction, viral hepatitis, drug induced liver injury
18
Q

How do you treat alcoholic hepatitis?

A

treat symptoms:
- infection
- jaundice
- encephalopathy
- alcohol withdrawal
- IV fluids
- antacids prevent GI bleed

19
Q

What is the prognosis of alcoholic hepatitis?

A

very high if alcohol consumption continues and nutrition not fixed

20
Q

What is the treatment of alcoholic hepatitis?

A
  • only if Glasgow alcoholic hepatitis score is high. prednisolone. not for non-severe cases as makes risk worse
  • treat nutrition
  • give thiamine VitB
21
Q

What does prednisolone do?

A

treats inflammatory process in liver.
HOWEVER risks GI bleed and infection.

22
Q

What is the mortality rate for untreated encephalopathy?

A

64% 1 year

23
Q

What causes steatosis and steatohepatitis?

A

diabetes, obesity, hypercholesterolaemia, alcohol

24
Q

What is NASH? What LFT is prominent?

A

non alcoholic steatohepatitis - inflammation due to fat. asymptomatic but see high ALT (alanine aminotransferase)