Alcoholic Liver Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Causes of liver disease

A
Alcohol consumption
Viral infections e.g. hepatitis
Inherited disease e.g. Wilson's
Vascular abnormalities
Toxins, cancer, biliary tract disorders, infections, etc.
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2
Q

What is the recommended number of units per week in UK?

A

14 units

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3
Q

What classifies as ‘binge drinking’

A

> 6 units in a single session

- major cause for A&E admissions

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4
Q

What are the short term affects of alcohol on the body?

A

1) Loss of inhibition (impaired judgement)
2) Decreased respiratory rate
3) GI disturbances
4) Loss of consciousness
5) Impotence (inability to take effective action)
6) Acute poisoning
7) Complexion/effect on appearance
8) Unintentional injuries

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5
Q

What are the long term effects of alcohol on the body?

A

1) Liver disease
2) Cancer
3) Pancreatitis
4) GI ulceration
5) Osteoporosis (malabsorption)
6) Infertility
7) Heart disease and stroke due to cholesterol
8) Increased blood pressure
9) Obesity
10) Dementia

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6
Q

Stages of liver disease

A

Healthy liver
Fatty liver (steatosis)
Fibrosis
Cirrhosis

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7
Q

How is alcohol metabolised?

A

Alcohol dehydrogenase to acetaldehyde
Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase to acetic acid
Further metabolised to fatty acids

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8
Q

What happens to alcohol metabolism in chronic consumption?

A

Impaired efficiency of aldehyde dehydrogenase

1) Build up of acetaldehyde = inflammation, necrosis (inflammatory immune response- protein function)
2) Acetaldehyde = inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase (increased levels of circulating alcohol- causes effects to persist for longer)

Upregulation of CYP450 2E1

  • Microsomal ethanol oxidising system responsible for ~10% in low consumption
  • High consumption = increased free radicals produced causing further damage
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9
Q

What is fatty liver?

Is it reversible? What does it effect?

A

Accumulation of fat in the hepatocytes
- due to disruption of metabolic pathways

Reversible and rarely symptomatic
- doesn’t effect metabolism of food/drugs

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10
Q

What is the form of acute alcoholic hepatitis that is commonly caused by alcohol consumption? (AAH)

A

Steatohepatitis

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11
Q

What is steatohepatitis?

A

Accumulation of fat + hepatocellular injury

  • inflammation and fibrosis
  • can cause liver pain, vomiting, confusion
  • improves with abstinence (though many will still develop cirrhosis despite)
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12
Q

What is thought to be the mechanisms of injury for steatohepatitis?

A

Poorly understood

  • oxidative stress
  • aldehyde accumulation
  • altered protein function
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13
Q

What is fibrosis/cirrhosis?

A

Inflammation + fibrogenesis + collagen deposition

  • the more episodes of inflammation, the more likely it is to develop
  • irreversible, unlike acute episodes
  • direct injury from free radicals and expression of inflammatory cytokines
  • may exhibit signs of decompensation
  • abstinence is key in management
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14
Q

Will cirrhosis occur in all patients with multiple episodes of inflammation?

A

No, dependent on individuals

Increased susceptibility depends on:

  • genetics
  • age
  • gender
  • BMI
  • race
  • consumption patterns
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15
Q

Give the outline of the management plan for patients admitted with AAH

A

1) Treat withdrawal symptoms and seizures if they occur
2) Treat the inflammatory component of AAH
3) Treat any complications of both liver disease and alcohol use
4) Treat malnutrition/malabsorption
5) Abstinence

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16
Q

Treatment (AAH) for malnutrition and behavioural changes (delusions, agitation, confusion)

A

Sedatives and vitamin supplement
- e.g. Chlordiazepoxide (BZ) + Pabrinex (injection)

Chlordiazepoxide

  • anti-convulsant and sedative
  • slow onset means lower risk of dependency
  • symptom triggered dosing
  • if chronic end stage patients, give oxazepam/lorazepam (shorter t1/2)
17
Q

Why might shorter-acting BZs be used?

A

BZs are metabolised by the liver

- effects may last much longer than desired

18
Q

Why is Pabrinex used?

A

Many patients will have poor diet

  • vitamin deficient (high carbs, low protein, vitamins and minerals)
  • malabsorption in intestinal mucosa (corrosion of lining)
  • thiamine deficiency (vitamin B = polyneuritis- motor/sensory effects)
19
Q

What can thiamine deficiency lead to?

A

1) Wernicke’s encephalopathy (mimics dementia)
- vitamin B reserves used up
- leads to nstagmus (involuntary rapid eye movements), ataxia (loss control of body movements), learning/memory impairment

2) Korsakoff syndrome

20
Q

Dosing for Pabrinex?

A

1-3 pairs BD/TDS

  • Avoid IM if coagulopathic
  • IV also available
21
Q

What are the typical signs of acute alcoholic hepatitis?

A

Signs of decompensation
Enlarged liver (hepatomegaly)
Fever
Leucocytosis (increased WBC)

22
Q

Lab signs of AAH

A
Increased:
WBC
Neutrophil count
AST
INR
Bilirubin
23
Q

If signs indicate AAH, but also raised creatinine?

A

Hepato-renal syndrome

- indication for liver transplant (poor prognostic marker)

24
Q

Scoring systems used for AAH

A

MELD
Lille

  • albumin, bilirubin, INR, creatinine
  • recalculate as treatment progresses
25
Q

Pharmacological treatment for AAH

A

1) Pabrinex/Chlordiazepoxide
2) Corticosteroids e.g. prednisolone 7 days/ pentoxifylline (inhibits TNFa, phosphodiesterase inhibitor)

NB: Pentoxifylline: less evidence based, more experience based for prescriber

Currently in clinical trials:

  • anti-TNF biologics
  • antioxidants
  • colchicine etc.
26
Q

What systems does alcohol effect and how?

A

Dysregulation GABA + Glutamine

GABA system

  • normally, facilitates GABAergic neurotransmission, leading to inhibition
  • chronically: body adapts and reduces GABA receptors to counteract alcohol-induced increase in activity

Endogenous opioid system (dopamine)
- increases release of endorphins to stimulate dopamine release

Glutamine system

  • inhibits excitatory glutaminergic function
  • chronically: upregulated NMDA receptors to increase glutamate functioning
27
Q

What happens if alcohol is suddenly withdrawn?

A

CNS hyperactivity

- can lead to seizures

28
Q

Treatment for abstinence?

A

1) Psychological treatments (counselling, therapy)

2) Pharmacological treatment
- Acamprosate
- Disulfram
- Naltrexone (opioid antagonist)

29
Q

What is the mechanism of Acamprosate?

A

1st line treatment

  • stimulates GABAergic neurotransmission
  • antagonise effects of excitatory amino-acid neurotransmission
  • no liver metabolism nor sedation
30
Q

What is the mechanism and profile of Disulfram?

A

Irreversibly inhibits aldehyde dehydrogenase

  • increased levels of acetaldehyde exacerbate the effects of alcohol, causing patient to refrain from further alcohol intake
  • nausea, flushing, headache, palpitations
  • metabolised by liver, excreted by kidneys

Benefit is debatable, and relies on patient being compliant

31
Q

What are the significant interactions with disulfram?

What are the ADR’s associated with disulfram?

A

Phenytoin

Hepatotoxicity

32
Q

What is the mechanism and profile of Naltrexone?

A

Opioid antagonist

  • decrease the affects of alcohol (causes increased opioid activity)
  • reduce craving and consumption
  • metabolised liver; excreted kidneys
  • ADR: hepatoxocity