Liver Pathophysiology in General Flashcards

1
Q

2 Cirrhosis Staging Methods

A
  • Old method = CTP score
    • Components - encephalopathy, ascites, serum albumin, INR, serum bilirubin
    • Classified as Child’s A B and C
    • First 2 are subjective
  • New method = MELD score
    • 1- total bilirubin
    • 2- INR
    • 3- serum sodium
    • 4- serum creatinine
    • **Automatic inc in score if hepatocellular carcinoma
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2
Q

Steatosis (2 types)

A
  • Steatosis - unusual accumulation of fat in cytoplasm
  • Macro - large fat droplet in cytoplasm that pushes nucleus to side of cell
  • Micro - cytoplasm intact but small fat droplet; nucleus still in middle of cell
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3
Q

Mallory Hyaline

A

eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions; aggregates of denatured keratin filaments

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4
Q

How do you detect alpha-1-anti-trypsin?

A

PAS stain

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5
Q

Hepatocyte Apoptosis v Necrosis

A
  • Hepatocyte apoptosis - shrinks, nucleus condenses/fragments, very pink/eosinophilic cytoplasm
  • Confluent Necrosis - (when damage is widespread and many hepatocytes undergo necrosis) lose lobule shape as many hepatocytes collapse
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6
Q

5 Inflammatory Cells Liver Makes In Response (by etiology)

A
  • Lymphocytes - viral antigens
  • Plasma cells - autoimmune hepatitis
  • Neutrophils - alcoholic hepatitis (often Mallory hyaline inclusions are surrounded by neutrophils)
  • Eosinophils - acute T cell-mediated rejection
  • Granuloma - drugs, toxins, fungal infection (more chronic process)
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7
Q

Liver Regeneration

A
  • Mitotic replication of hepatocytes adjacent to those that died (don’t need stem cells even after yrs damage)
  • BUT if very severe necrosis/ acute liver failure… differentiation of hepatobilliary stem cells (canal of Hering)
  • Eventually in chronic diseases the hepatocytes become senescent and must use stem cells (ductular reactions -
    clusters transitioning from hepatobiliary stem cells —> hepatocytes)
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8
Q

How does cirrhosis develop?

A
  • Kupffer cells and lymphocytes release cytokines (TNF-alpha and IL-1) AND ROS –> activate Stellate cell genes involved in fibrogenesis
  • Dense fibrous septa –> later encircle regenerating hepatocytes (cirrhosis)
  • Scar formation can be reversed - if injury interrupted then stellate activation stops, scars condense, MMPs can break scar apart
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9
Q

Portal HTN (definition, cause, sources)

A
  • Clinically sig if portal P grad > 12 mmHg (normal < 5); b/n portal vein- hep vein
  • P = QR (so inc resistance or inc flow will inc press)
    • Cirrhosis causes resistance to portal flow
  • Pre-hepatic (portal or splenic vein thrombosis OR acute pancreatitis)
  • Intrahepatic (same causes as cirrhosis)
    • Pre-sinusoidal - schisto, PBC
    • Sinusoidal - alcoholic cirrhosis, Hep C, NAFLD
    • Post-sinusoidal - venous occlusion, alcoholic hepatitis
  • Post-hepatic (block outflow by hepatic vein thrombosis - aka Budd Chiari syndrome OR heart disease)
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10
Q

Hepatic Encephalopathy (mechanism, phases, tx)

A
  • State of dec arousal
  • Due to brain exposure to ammonia so dx is ammonia serum level; ammonia crosses BBB but no urea cycle in brain so converted to glutamine –> suppresses PSPs
  • 4 Stages
    I - altered sleep, affect and orientation; mild confusion
    II- drowsy, accentuated stage I, inappropriate behavior
    III- arousable; marked confusion; speech incoherent; now worried about airway
    IV - coma (not arousable)
  • See asterixis, constructional apraxia, abnormal EEG
  • Tx - ammonia lowering agents (ammonia mainly from bacteria in GI); lactulose
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11
Q

Ascites ( 3 theories)

A
  • Portal HTN / dec albumin–> inc hydrostatic P in sinusoids –> pours out into peritoneal cavity

1- Overflow theory: renal abnormalities –> sodium and water retention

2- Underfilling Theory: peripheral arterial vasodilation via NO in splanchnic –> underfiling –> RAAS

3- Forward Theory: (combo) splanchnic vasodilation –> RAAS –> water and sodium retention + impaired water clearance (impaired water clearance leads to dilution so hyponatremia)

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12
Q

HCC (who is at highest risk + how to screen)

A
  • highest risk in hemochromatosis, NASH and Hep B, Hep C

- AFP and US screening every 6 mo if cirrhosis of any cause

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