Lec 21 Alcoholic Liver Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Are men or women more at risk for alcoholic liver disease? why?

A

women b/c they have lower activity of gastric mucosal alcohol dehydrogenase

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2
Q

What genetic association with alcoholic liver disease?

A

mutation in aldehyde dehydrogenase

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3
Q

What is threshold level of alchol for women/men each day?

A

80 g/day men and 20 g/day women

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4
Q

What are physical signs of alcoholic liver disease?

A

may have no symptoms

may have jaundice, spider nevi, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly

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5
Q

What are signs of alcoholic hepatitis?

A
fever, tachycardia
increased WBC
AST > ALT
increased GGT, bilirubin
portal HTN
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6
Q

What causes alcoholic steatosis?

A

alcohol oxidation causing excess accumulation of intracellular lipids

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7
Q

Is hepatic steatosis reversible?

A

yes

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8
Q

What 3 things characterize alcoholic hepatitis?

A
  • steatosis
  • hepatocellular necrosis
  • acute inflammation
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9
Q

What zone of liver most affected by alcoholic hepatitis?

A

zone 3 of hepatic acinus

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10
Q

What are mallory bodies?

A

eosinophlic inclusions in hepatocytes; made of cytoskeletal intermediary filaments

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11
Q

What do you see on histology with alcoholic hepatitis?

A
  • swollen and necrotic hepatocytes
  • neutrophil infiltration
  • mallory bodies
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12
Q

Why does presence of neutrophils suggest alcoholic hepatitis?

A

most other types of hepatitis present with lots of mononuclear cells [lymphocytes] not neutrophils

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13
Q

What do you see in alcoholic cirrhosis?

A
  • deposition of collagen around terminal hepatic vein in chicken wire pattern
  • micronodular cirrhosis
  • shrunken liver
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14
Q

What is the specific pattern of fibrosis in alcoholic cirrhosis?

A

chicken wire deposition of collagen

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15
Q

What happens if you abstain from alcohol when you have alcoholic cirrhosis?

A

you get macronodular cirrhosis b/c normal regenerative response no longer impaired by alcohol

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16
Q

What do you see in non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis?

A

macronudlar, zone 3 predominant steatosis
hepatocellular ballooning
can progress to fibrosis and cirrhosis

17
Q

What are some diseases associated with non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis?

A
  • high BMI, triglycerides, insulin
  • low HDL
  • diabetes

== Metabolic syndrome

18
Q

What is the pathophysilogy of non-alcoholic hepatosteatosis?

A

excess free fatty acids causing hepatocyte damage

19
Q

What do you see on labs in NAFLD?

A

ALT > AST
elevated triglycerides
insulin resistance

20
Q

Whats is NAFLD vs NASH?

A

NAFLD = non alcoholic fatty liver disease = spectrum of abnormalities includes hepatic steatosis alone or including necroinflammatory changes and fibrosis

NASH = nonalcoholic steatohepatitis = clinical pathological syndrome diagnosed by liver biopsy; requires that there be necrosis and inflammation