Hyperbilirubinemia and Cholestasis Flashcards

1
Q

Bile + Main Components

A
  • Bile - actual liquid produced and secreted by liver; composed of water, bile salts, bilirubin, electrolytes and lipophilic cholesterol and lipoproteins
  • Bilirubin- heme breakdown product excreted via the bile
  • Bile Salts - bile acid + cation (Na); emulsify fats for absorption (+ fat soluble vit and drugs) and help eliminate lipophilic toxins
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2
Q

Hyperbilirubinemia v. Cholestasis

A
  • Cholestasis - disruption in biliary metabolism; back up of bilirubin –> toxic levels and deposition in numerous tissues
  • *Specific Labs - Inc ALP, GGT and 5-NT if blockage
  • Hyperbilirubinemia - high bilirubin in serum regardless of presence of cholestasis (true defect in metabolism)
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3
Q

Bile Acid Circulation

A

blood –> sinusoids –> NTCP on basolateral membrane (paired w/ Na-K pump) –> ER for conjugation w/ glycine or taurine in hepatocyte –> pumped out by BSEP (against gradient) —> bile canaliculus –> bile

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4
Q

Bilirubin Circulation

A

blood –> sinusoids –> OATP on basolateral membrane (own pump) –> ER for UDP-glucouronidation (via UDPTG) –> pumped out MRP2 (against gradient) –> bile canaliculus –> bile –> SI

  • Bacteria breaks bilirubin down –> urobilinogen
    • 1- absorbed in colon –> circulation –> kidney where it is oxidized to urobilin (turns urine yellow)
    • 2- OR stays in colon and oxidized there –> stercobilin (turns stool brown)
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5
Q

Bile Flow (2 mechanisms)

A

1- Bile Acid - Dep Flow: bile in the canaliculi is highly osmotic and thus drags water into lumen as it moves along
- Flow enhanced by secretin

2- Bile Acid - Indep Flow: in ducts, removal of water along w/ NaCl + addition of bicarb to concentrate the bile

**Meal –> CCK –> gallbladder contracts AND sphincter of Oddi relaces –> flow down pressure grad –> duodenum

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6
Q

Normal Bilirubin Lab Values

A
  • Total - .3-1.5
  • Conjugated - .0-.3
  • Unconjugated .1-1.0 (not water soluble so not excreted)
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7
Q

Classification of Causes of Hyperbilirubinemia

A
  • Unconjugated
    • Hemolysis - pre-hepatic cause; inc RBC death; due to glucose-6-phos dehydrogenase def, sickle cell, drugs (sulfa), etc
    • Neonatal
    • UDPTG Def (genetic disorders)
    • Others - fasting (dec glucose needed for glucouronidation), drugs, hypothyroidism
  • Conjugated (if > 30% total bilirubin is conjugated)
    • Congenital/ Intrahepatic (conjugated but cannot exit hepatocyte to backs up into circulation) - 3 disorders
    • Acquired/ Intrahepatic - drug interactions, chronic liver disease (late stages of PBC and primary sclerosing cholangitis), alcoholic liver disease, infections (hepatitis), drugs
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8
Q

Neonatal Jaundice

A
  • delay in UDPGT function (treat w/ phototherapy or phenobarbital to induce enzyme)
  • OR breastfed jaundice b/c maternal milk contains UDPGT inhibitor (cessation)
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9
Q

2 UDGPT Deficiency Disorders

A
  • Gilbert’s syndrome - benign dec UDPGT activity; auto rec; usually asymptomatic or jaundice under physio stress
  • Crigler Najjar - severe total lack of UDPGT activity; leads to kernicterus and death w/in 18 mo if not aggressively treated; use phototherapy, plasmaphoresis or liver transplant NOT phenobaribtal
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10
Q

3 Congenital Conjugated Hyperbilirubin Disorders

A
  • Dubin-Johnson syndrome - benign; auto recessive; impaired storage or excretion thru MRP2; causes black liver from pigmentation but liver function preserved may use phenobarbital
  • Rotor’s Syndrome - benign; auto recessive; impaired intracellular storage of organic anions but normal bile salt excretion and normal liver function; no tx needed
  • Byler’s Syndrome - defect in secretion of conjugated bile acids across canalicular membrane –> severe watery diarrhea and cholestasis
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11
Q

What drugs can cause inc conjugated bilirubin?

A

oral contraceptives, aspirin, acetaminophen, anti-dep, NSAIDs, niacin, TPN

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12
Q

Cholestasis Work Up

A
  • If worried about obstruction, do ab ultrasound
  • If see dilated ducts on ultrasound w/ high suspicion then do ERCP (risk but good b/c can also treat w/ scope by removing stones, stenting, etc)
  • If not dilated then do specific biochemical tests to eval for other liver diseases
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13
Q

Classification of Causes of Cholestasis

A
  • Intrahepatic - impaired uptake, processing or excretion in hepatocyte
    • Viral or alcoholic hepatitis
    • Hepatotoxinc agents
    • Drugs - NSAIDs, chlorpromazine, phenobarbital, steroids, etc
    • Prolonged TPN
    • Byler’s Syndrome
  • Extrahepatic - impaired delivery from canaliculi to duodenum
    • PBC
    • Primary sclerosing cholangitis
    • Common bile duct stones (choledocolithiasis)
    • Pancreatic carcinoma at head of pancreas
    • Pancreatitis (if head inflammed)
    • Biliary stricture/ ampulla of Vater stenosis
    • Ampulla of Vater neoplasm
    • Mirizzi’s Syndrome (stone in cystic duct neck that impinges on common bile duct)
    • Parasite obstructing common bile duct
    • Post-operative trauma
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14
Q

Clinical Manifestations of Cholestasis

A

EXCESS bilirubin in…

  • Serum - hyperbilirubinemia and pruritus (itching)
  • Sclera - scleral icterus (b/c elastin there)
  • Skin - jaundice
  • Brain - kernicterus (encephalopathy)
  • Dark urine (excess in urine) or light stool (no bile in stool if obstruction)

ALSO …

  • Mal-digestion and malabsorption of fats (def in fat-soluble vit and steatorrhea)
  • Impaired cholesterol excretion –> xanthomas
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