Hepatobiliary Function Flashcards

1
Q

What is cirrhosis caused by? (general)

A

Damage to liver where normal cells are replaced by scar tissue. Causes liver to no longer have that open, easy contact with the blood.

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2
Q

What is portal hypertension?

A

An increase in resistance to portal flow, caused usually by cirrhosis.

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3
Q

What two changes do you see from portal HTN?

A
  • caput medusae

- esophageal varices

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4
Q

What causes hepatic encephalopathy?

A

Impairment of urea cycle metabolism leading to increased ammonia, which can easily cross blood-brain-barrier and alter brain function.

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5
Q

What is the relative amount of the 4 bile acids?

A

cholic acid > chenodeoxycholic acid > deoxycholic acid > lithocholic acid

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6
Q

What two mechanisms do bile secretion occur via?

A
  • Passive movement of cations into canaliculus

- Stimulated by secretin via secretion of HCO3- and H20 from ductule cells

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7
Q

What two systems mediate the uptake of bile salts?

A
  • Na-dependent transport protein (NTCP)

- Na- INDEPENDENT transport protein (OATP)

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8
Q

What two transport proteins carry bile salts into the bile canaliculi?

A
  • BSEP (bile salt excretory pump)

- MRP2 (Multidrug resistant protein 2)

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9
Q

What condition can hemolytic anemia cause? Why?

A
  • jaundice

- b/c liver is overwhelmed by bilirubin spilling out of destroyed RBCs, get an increase in unconjugated bilirubin

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10
Q

What causes neonatal jaundice? (2)

A
  • fetal erythrocytes dying (shorter lifespan)

- less active UDP glucuronyl transferase

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11
Q

What does Gilbert syndrome cause? Why? How severe is the illness?

A
  • increased levels of unconjugated bilirubin?
  • decreased activity of gene that codes for UDP glucuronyltransferase (UGT1A1)
  • it is a mild illness. Don’t usually notice it unless under physiological stress
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12
Q

What does Crigler-Najjar syndrome cause? Why? How severe is it?

A
  • increased levels of unconjugated biliruben
  • mutation in gene that codes for UDP glucuronyltransferase, leads to less/no function (type 2 vs type 1)
  • It can be severe depending on if the enzyme functions not at all (type 1) or has decreased function (type 2)
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13
Q

What symptoms can Crigler-Najjar syndrome type 1 cause?

A

Kernicterus - where unconjugated biliruben concentrates in brain tissues (basal ganglia most specifically)

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14
Q

What are the treatments for Crigler-Najjar? (5)

A
  • phototherapy (up to age 4)
  • blood transfusions
  • oral calcium phosphate and carbonate (complexes w/bilirubin in gut)
  • liver transplant (for type 1)
  • phenobarbitol (type 2)
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15
Q

What does Dubin-Johnson syndrome cause? Why? How severe is it?

A
  • increased levels of conjugated bilirubin
  • caused by mutations in gene that code for MRP2, so hepatocytes can’t secrete conjugated bilirubin
  • is not very severe
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16
Q

What are the symptoms of Dubin-Johnson syndrome?

A
  • mild jaundice through life

- BLACK LIVER

17
Q

What does rotor syndrome cause? Why? How severe is it?

A
  • causes buildup of both conj/unconj bilirubin in blood, though MOST is conjugated
  • b/c of gene mutations in gene that codes for OATP1B1/P1B3, leading to absence/nonfunctional proteins
  • similar to Dubin-Johnson, but without black liver… not super severe
18
Q

How does phototherapy work?

A

It converts the trans-bilirubin to cis-bilirubin, making it water-soluble.