Pathology- Acute Liver Injury 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common cause of acute liver injury?

A

alcohol

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2
Q

who gets alcoholic hepatitis and how do they present?

A

40-60yo w/ rapid onset of jaundice, moderately elevated AST <300 and mildly elevated ALT.

tender enlarged liver with moderately elevated bilirubin, alk phosphate, and AST

  • leukocytosis
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3
Q

microscopic findings of acute liver injury?

A

1) ballooning degeneration
2) steatosis
3) mallory bodies
4) feathery degeneration
5) apoptosis
6) acute inflammation

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4
Q

what are some other common manifestations of alcoholic hepatitis?

A

1) bleeding tendency– diagnosied by prolonged PT or INR
2) confusion or worse hepatic encephalopathy
3) fever

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5
Q

what is the ratio of AST/ALT normally? how is it different in alcohol?

A
  • normally the ratio is around 1.15

most causes of acute liver injury release more ALT than ast so you have a ratio <1

  • w/ alcohol there is more ast than alt so ration is >2
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6
Q

what is ballooning degenration?

A
  • hepatocytes become swollen with almost clear cytoplasm from from any injury that depletes ATP causing the Na/K pump to fail w/ influx of Na and h20 into the cells

** it is reversible

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7
Q

what is steatosis?

A

fatty change - fat accumulation in hepatocyte cytoplasm seen in many liver disease

1) macrovesicular - single cytoplasmic lipid droplet pushing nucleus to the side
2) micro-vesicular

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8
Q

macrovesicular steatosis is d/t what?

A
  • decreased lipoprotein synthesis w/ impaired secretion of lipids

* more common form of steatosis and seen in alcoholic liver disease, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, and with glucocorticoids

*Reversible

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9
Q

what causes microvesicular steatosis?

A

d/t impaired mitochondiral beta oxidation of FA for ATP synthesis

* seen in acute fatty liver of pregnancy, reye’s syndrome (aspirin toxicity), w/ multiple hornet stings, and mixed with macro-vesicular steatosis in alcoholic hepatitis

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10
Q

is microvesicular steatosis reversible?

A
  • microvesicular steatosisi is less common and less reversible than macrovesicular.

* dont get aspirin to children!

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11
Q

greatly enlarged defective mega mitochondria associated with

A

microvesicular steatosis

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12
Q

what are mallory bodies?

causes of it?

A
  • aggregates of intermediate filament (cytokeratins). they are granular or ropy, darkly eosinophilic or amphophilic deposits often in a perinuclear location
  • alcohol and obesity are the most common causes of it

***hepatocytes with mallory bodies often have ballooning degeneration and are surrounded by neutrophils

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13
Q

microscopic triad of alcoholic hepatitis

A

-steatosis, mallory bodies, and neutrophils

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14
Q

feathery degeneraiton what is it and what does it indicate?

A
  • w/ severe intracellular cholestasis, hepatocytes swell and teh cytoplasm become wispy = feathery degenration
  • indicates severe hepatocyte damage and many of the hepatocytes with it will die
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15
Q

what causes NASH and how does it differ from nonalcoholic steatohepatitis?

A
  • obesity causes liver disease almost identical to alcohol called NASH
  • NASH tends to be milder than alcoholic hepatitis and to lack cholestasis
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16
Q

what is feathery degeneration associaed with?

A
  • biliary obstruction by stones, tumors, or granulomas
17
Q

which hepatocytes get more feathery degeneration?

A
  • periportal hepatocytes more so than centrolobular and midzonal hepatocytes
18
Q
  • when is GGT elevated?
A
  • ggt is elevated by both biliary and hepatocellular disease so it is less helpful in differentiating them than with alk phos
19
Q

what is the most common form of cell death in hepatic viral infections?

A
  • apoptosis
20
Q

finding hepatocyte injury and necrosis in alcoholic steatohepatitis is msot common in what type of hepatocytes?

A

centrolobular zone

21
Q
A