Study guide test 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Fatty Infiltration, what type of disease process?

A

It is a benign process and may be reversible with correction of the process, but it is also a precursor for significant chronic disease.

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2
Q

When will we observe fatty infiltration(fatty liver)?

A

obesity

excessive alcohol intake

poorly controlled hyperlipidemia

diabetes mellitus

excess corticosteroids

pregnancy

total parenteral hyperalimentation

severe hepatitis

glycogen storage disease

cystic fibrosis

pharmaceutical

chronic illness

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3
Q

What are the sonographic findings of acute hepatitis?

A

normal liver texture

portal vein borders are more prominent

liver parenchyma slightly more echogenic

hepatosplenomegaly is present

gallbladder wall is thickened

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4
Q

What is Budd-Chiari Syndrome?

A

uncommon illness caused by thrombosis of the hepatic veins or IVC

characterized by abdominal pain, massive ascites, and hepatomegaly

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5
Q

Where are echinococcal cysts most commonly located?

A

enter the proximal portion of small intestine

larvae burrow through the mucosa, enter the portal circulation, and travel to the liver

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6
Q

What is the most common benign tumor of the liver?

A

cavernous hemangioma

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7
Q

What benign liver tumor is found in patients with Type I glycogen storage disease?

A

hepatic adenoma

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8
Q

Patients who have hepatocellular carcinoma are likely to have had what?

A

cirrhosis

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9
Q

What is the most common form of neoplastic involvement of the liver?

A

Metastatic disease

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10
Q

In sever hepatocellular destruction, the AST and the ALT levels are going to do what?

A

Increase

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11
Q

Elevation of the ALK Phos is associated with what?

A

obstruction

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12
Q

Elevation of the serum bilirubin results in?

A

Jaundice

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13
Q

What are the typical symptoms a patient may have with an abcess formation?

A

fever, pain, pleuritis, nausea, vomitting, diarrhea, elevated liver function tests, leukocytosis, anemia

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14
Q

What tumor consists of large blood filled spaces?

A

cavernous hemangioma

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15
Q

Dilated intrahepatic ducts may be seen in what?

A

biliary obstruction:proximal and distal

extrahepatic mass

common duct stricture

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16
Q

What benign liver tumor is located near the free edge of the liver and is well subscribed and solitary?

A

Liver cell adenoma

17
Q

Common malignancies that include the pediatric population:

A

neuroblastomas

Wilms’ tumor

leukemia

18
Q

Older man has a history of alcoholism

He’s been diagnosed with acute pancreatitis

Hematocrit and hypotensive levels are decreased

What’s happening?

A

Hemorrhagic pancreatitis

19
Q

A patient with painless jaundice, weight loss, and a decreased appetite

What are we looking at?

A

Hepatitis

20
Q

What serum level is twice the normal level in acute pancreatitis?

A

Amylase

21
Q

What are the clinical signs and symptoms of acute pancreatitis?

A

severe pain that usually occurs after a large meal or alcohol binge, nausea, vomitting, history of gallstones or alcoholism, mild fever, amylase and lipase increase (lipase takes longer to increase, but stays increased for longer period of time), leukocytosis, abdominal distention

22
Q

What’s the most common cause of pancreatitis in the U.S.?

A

biliary tract disease

23
Q

What condition causes an increase in the secretion of abnormal mucus by the exocrine glands?

A

cystic fibrosis (endocrine glands)

24
Q

What is the appearance of acute pancreatitis?

A

pancreas ranges from normal to focal/diffuse enlargement

hypoechoic texture (edema)

borders distinct but irregular

enlargement of head causes depression on IVC

40%-60% have gallstones

pancreatic duct may be enlarged

parapancreatic fluid collections

25
Q

What is the appearance of chronic pancreatitis?

A

gland is small and fibrotic

irregular borders

mixed echogenicity

dilated pancreatic duct (string of pearls sign with dilated duct)

look for calculi within duct

26
Q

What does orthotopic mean?

A

transplants-placed in same place as the dead organ

27
Q

How many liver transplants are performed each year?

A

5,000

28
Q

What are the complications from a liver transplant?

A

hepatic artery thrombosis-most common

anastomotic stenosis

thrombus in the portal vein or IVC

infection

fluid collections-hematomas, abscesses, bilomas, ascites, and seromas

rejection-occurs in 50%-70% of transplants

biliary leaks-most common site is biliary anastomosis

29
Q

What are the complications of renal transplants?

A

rejection

acute tubular necrosis

cyclosporine toxicity

malignancy

extraperitoneal fluid collections-hematomas, perinephric abscess, lymphocele

obstructive nephropathy

graph rupture

30
Q

What does ESRD stand for?

A

end stage renal disease

31
Q

Which kidney is more likely to be used from the donor?

A

left kidney is usually donated

32
Q

Sonographic appearance of a kidney that is failing:

A

Acute renal failure:

kidneys may appear normal in size or enlarged and may be hypoechoic with parenchymal disease

obstruction is responsible for aprox 5%

Chronic renal failure:

diffusely echogenic kidney with loss of normal anatomy

if bilateral, small kidneys are identified

33
Q

What is ATN?

A

acute tubular necrosis