011315 cirrhosis Flashcards

1
Q

cirrhosis etiologies

A

hep B (D), hep C, alcohol, hemochromatosis, Wilson’s disease, non-alcholic steatohepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, autoimmune hepatitis, alph-1 antitrypsin deficiency, Budd chiari syndrome

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2
Q

cirrhosis–examination findings

A

cachexia (muscle loss), jaundice, ascites, spider angioma, Dupuytren’s contractures, pitting edema, breast development, testicular atrophy, palmar erythema, hair loss, encephalopathy

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3
Q

lab findings for cirrhosis

A
elevated bilirubin
elevated transaminases
elevated alkaline phosphatase
decreased albumin
elevated PT/INR
thrombocytopenia
leukopenia
renal insufficiency
hyponatremia
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4
Q

spider angioma differential

A

advanced liver disease or pregnancy

due to estrogen levels

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5
Q

chronic cirrhosis-CT?

A

liver shrunken

spleen enlarged

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6
Q

Child Pugh scoring criteria

A

assess degree of cirrhosis with subjective and objective factors

to assess to see if needs liver transplant

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7
Q

what is used instead of Child Pugh now

A

model for end stage liver disease (MELD)–used b/c Child Pugh has subjective factors

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8
Q

Budd Chiari

A

hepatic vein thrombosis

leads to portal HTN

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9
Q

complications of cirrhosis

A
variceal bleed
ascites
spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (ascites becomes infected)
hepatorenal syndrome
hepatopulm syndrome
hepatic encephalopathy
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10
Q

when spleen enlarges, what happens?

A

sequesters platelets and WBCs

thrombocytopenia, leukopenia

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11
Q

to prevent variceal bleeds (for pt with varices that haven’t bled yet), what tx do you give

A

beta adrenergic blockers (non-selective beta blockers):
propranolol
nadolol

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12
Q

bleeding esophageal varices show what symptoms

A

vomiting black blood

melena

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13
Q

tx for active variceal hemorrhage

A

octreotide (decreases amt of blood coming into the portal vein)

band ligation

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14
Q

how does hyponatremia result from cirrhosis?

A

cirrhosis causes portal HTN, splachnic arterial vasodilatation, decreased effective circulating volume, activation of vasoconstrictor and antinatriuretic factors, more water retention than sodium retention

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15
Q

tx of ascites

A

2000 mg sodium restricted diet

diuretics (spironolactone to inhibit aldosterone, furosemide)

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16
Q

signs and symptoms in pts with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis

A

abdominal pain
fever
encephalopathy

17
Q

pathogenesis in spontaneous bacterial peritonitis

A

E coli
Strep

mostly gram negative

18
Q

in hepatorenal syndrome, what happens to kidney?

A

vasoconstriction

19
Q

in hepatorenal syndrome, what happens to urine sodium? urine micro? central venous pressure?

A

urine sodium is under 10 mEq/L
urine micro is normal
central venous pressure is low

20
Q

does hydration tx hepatorenal syndrome?

A

no

21
Q

tx for hepatopulm syndrome?

A

only tx is to relieve vasodilated state, meaning:

only way would be to get new liver

22
Q

pathophysiology of hepatic encephalopathy

A

gut derived neurotoxins can no longer be processed by liver due to hepatic insufficiency or hepatic bypass in portal HTN, so they cross the BBB

23
Q

what symptoms can you see with encephalopathy

A

asterixis

squeeze finger test-cannot maintain tone

24
Q

tx for enchalopathy

A

lactulose (decreases pH and converts NH3 to NH4)

rifaximin (antibiotic)

25
Q

causes of ACUTE liver failure in the US

A
acetaminophen toxicity
drugs
hep B
pregnancy
etc
26
Q

fulminant liver failure

A

acute liver failure with hepatocyte necrosis (causing coagulopathy, encephalopathy)

cerebral edema (inability of liver to metabolize ammonia. ammonia converted into glutamine by brain astrocytes, leading to astrocyte swelling). LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH

27
Q

hepatorenal syndrome is compliciation of

A

ascites

28
Q

the three complications of ascites

A

SBP
hepatorenal syndrome
hyponatremia