Unrein Hepatitis and Cirrhosis Flashcards

1
Q

best tests for Wilson’s disease

A

not cerruloplasmin, it is not reliable

24-hour urine test is best

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2
Q

primary biliary cirrhosis

A

primarily a disorder of middle-aged females
associated with + Anti Mitochonrial Antibody;
alk phos and cholesterol usually elevated

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3
Q

primary sclerosing cholangitis

A

usually males 20-50 yrs

associated with ulcerative colitis

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4
Q

Wilson’s

A

slight male predominance
autosomal recessive
suspect in females with Kayser-fleischer rings and parkinson’s like features
usually dx-ed by age 40
alk phos low normal,
zinc is a cofactor in the production of alk phos and is competitively inhibited by the excess copper

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5
Q

hep A transmitted how?

A

fecal-oral pathogen

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6
Q

Hep B

A

transmitted by blood, bodily fluids and tissue.

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7
Q

SAAG

A

serum-ascitic albumin gradient is calculated by subtracting the albumin concentration of the ascitic fluid from the albumin concentration of a serum specimen obtained on teh same day. It correlates with sinusoidal pressure and is a function of oncotic-hydrostatic balance

In cirrhosis the SAAG is high and the ascites total protein is low

in malignant ascites the SAAG is low and the ascites total protein is high

in cardiac ascites both measurements are high

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8
Q

autoimmune hepatitis

A

dx of exclusion- notable is the absence of viral markers. Often presents with fulminant hepatic enzyme elevation, but not a cholestatic picture. This disorder is common in perimenopausal women

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9
Q

core antibody

A

first immune response you’ll see

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10
Q

intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy

A

occurs during the second or third trimester, characterized by mild elevations of bilirubin and alk phos

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11
Q

hyperemesis gravidarum

A

morning sickness

can have elevated transaminases in 50% of cases but not associated with cholestasis or itching

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12
Q

HELLP

A

hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets

life-threatening complication of pregnancy typically occuring in third trimester and requiring urgent delivery

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13
Q

acute fatty liver of pregnancy

A

leads to liver failure with elevated transaminases and an abnormal INR

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14
Q

hemochromatosis

A

iron overload state with an elevated transferrin. Clinical finding can be nonspecific buy hyperpigmentation is a common finding

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15
Q

acute cholecystitis

A

acute symptoms associated with eating fatty meals and females of late reproductive age who are overweight

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16
Q

diagnostic test of choice for primary sclerosing cholangitis?

A

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)
you will see arborization of the biliary tree

magnetic resonsnance cholangiopancreatography

17
Q

test to diagnose hemochromatosis?

A

transferrin saturation

not ferritin; it’s an acute phase reactant

18
Q

irregular pulse with hemochromatosis?

other weirdness of hemochromatosis?

A

cardiomyopathy and atrial fibrillation

drinking and urinating more (diabetes)

19
Q

hemochromatosis

A

iron overload
iron deposition on the pancreas, heart and skin –> diabetes, arrhythmias, and hyperpigmented skin.

“Bronze Diabetes”’

20
Q

treatment for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis

A

weight loss and blood glucose control, with continued monitoring of the patient’s transaminases

21
Q

inh toxicity

A

a well-known hepatocellular toxin that requires close monitoring of liver enzymes.

22
Q

only time AST is usually greater than ALT

A

alcoholics

23
Q

asterixis

A

a “flapping” tremor
often from alcoholism

ammonia-induced

24
Q

treat alcoholic DT

A

lactulose

bacteria give off H+ that is added to ammonia

25
Q

ascites + sudden increase in abdominal girth

A

likely spontaneous bacterial peritonitis

26
Q

hepatorenal syndrome

A

decomposition of the kidneys, not the liver, and is characterized by activation of the RAAS system adn renal vasoconstriction as a result of systemic/ splanchnic vasodilation associated with cirrhosis

27
Q

important effect of cancer

A

hypercoagulable state

Trousseau syndrome

28
Q

CHF onset should be

A

relatively gradual

29
Q

hepatomegaly, portal vein thrombosis, or new ascites in someone with chronic hep B is what until proven otherwise?

A

hepatocellular carcinoma