Cirrhosis and Comp. of Liver D [3] Flashcards

1
Q

Complications of cirrhosis

A

variceal hemorrhage
ascites
encephalopathy
jaundice

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2
Q

Most common causes of cirrhosis

A

HCV

alcohol

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3
Q

Which one has complications?
Compensated cirrhosis
Decompensated cirrhosis

A

Compensated Cirrhosis - no complications

Decompensated cirrhosis - complications

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4
Q

Liver biopsy is not necessary to dx for pre-transplant eval if we can find what?

A

decompensated (complications) cirrhosis or CT scan diagnosing cirrhosis

PE: spider angiomata, palmar erythema

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5
Q

Mechanism of portal HTN and how it leads to cirrhosis

A

portal HTN can be due to increase resistance or increase in venous inflow

↑ intrahepatic resistance → portal HTN → distortion of sinusoidal architecture of the liver → even more ↑ R

(blood has to go through different ways like esophagus to get back to heart; also blood backs up in portal veins leading to splenomegaly)
- ↑ intrahepatic resistance in cirrhosis is not only structural but also fxnal

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6
Q

MELD score

A

estimates risk of 3 mo mortality
Determines priority in cirrhosis
- higher score = priority

6.4+9.8xlog(INR) + 11.2xlog(Cr) + 3.8xlog(Bili)

nL = 6

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7
Q

Cirrhosis is what type of portal HTN

A

Sinusoidal

  • small hepatic v are obstructed
  • RUQ pain, ascites, hepatomegaly, jaundice

HVPG is increased >5

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8
Q

Pre-hepatic HTN

A

Portal or splenic ven thrombosis

liver is nl, blood backs up in spleen and esophagus

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9
Q

Pre-sinusoidal portal HTN

A

Shistosomiasis
- eggs are stuck b4 the sinusoids

HVPG is nl (3-5)

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10
Q

Post-sinusoidal portal HTN

A

veno-occlusive disease

HVPG is increased >5

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11
Q

Post-hepatic portal HTN

A

Budd-chiari syndrome
(hepatic vein thrombosis)

HVPG is nl (↑P - ↑P @ heart)
(pre and post hepatic is nl)

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12
Q

In cirrhosis, NO activity is ____ and vasoconstrictors are ____

A

NO reduced
VC increased

→ increased resistance →

  • structural changes (fibrosis, regenerative nodules)
  • active vasoconstriction (↓No, ↑VC)

(note: ↑ NO → splanchnic vasodilation → ↑portal venous inflow → ↑portal HTN)

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13
Q

NL hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) is

A

3-5 mmhg

HVPG = WHVP - FHVP

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14
Q

Which type of portal HTN is HVPG elevated in?

A

sinusoidal

post sinusoidal

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15
Q

Predictors of variceal hemorrhage

A
variceal size (larger more likely to rupture)
red signs (risk 4 bleed)
child
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16
Q

Decreasing what two things reduce risk of variceal rupture?

A

↓ portal P

↓ HVPG

17
Q

Therapies for varices

A

Vasoconstrictor - OCTREOTIDE!
- ↓ splanchnic flow → ↓portal pressure

TIPS/shunt surgery
- create comm btwn portal v and hepatic V

18
Q

Most common cause of ascites

A

cirrhosis

- US is most sensitive way to detect ascites

19
Q

How does portal HTN result in ascites?

A

Portal HTN → shear stress → ↑ NO → vasodilation → BP goes down → activation of neurohormonal systems (renin, angiotensin, aldosterone) → sodium and water retension → ASCITES

20
Q

Refractory ascites

A

acites that cannot be managed by diuretics anymore

-80%

21
Q

Serum-Ascites Albumin Gradient (SAAG):

A

. SAAG correlates with sinusoidal pressure. SAAG 1.1 nl

Most patients with CIRRHOTIC ASCITES will have serum-ascites albumin GREATER than 1.1

Peritoneal malignancy will be less than 1.1

22
Q

Hepatorenal syndrome

- what is always present?

A

renal failure in pts with:

  1. cirrhosis
  2. advanced liver failure
  3. severe sinusoidal portal HTN

ASCITES AND HYPONATREMIA are ALWAYS PRESENT IN HRS

  • no significant change in kidney
    (fxnl renal failure)
23
Q

Type I vs Type II hepatorenal syndrome

A

Type I: rapidly progressive renal failure (2 weeks)

Type II: more slowly progressive

24
Q

Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis (SBS)

A

bacterial translocation →
migration of viable microorganisms from intestinal lumen to mesenteric lymph nodes and other extraintestinal organs and sites →
increase conditions associated with high risk of infxn by gram (-) organisms (burn, shock, trauma) but DOES NOT increase pre-hepatic portal HTN

25
Q

Hepatic Encephalopathy

A

neuropsychiatric complication due to

  1. portosystemic shunt
  2. chronic liver failure

Due to failure to metabolize neurotoxic substances (hyperammonemia) → glutamine accumulation

(note: astrocytes are the only cells in the brain that can metabolize ammonia)

26
Q

tx for hepatic encephalopathy

A

lactulose

  • 2-3 bowel movements/day
  • less time to absorb ammonia, trap it in colon and increase movement through colon

Antibiotics to kill bacteria in gut that make ammonia