Liver Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

zones of the liver

A

periportal zone
mid acinar zone
pericentral

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2
Q

what are zones of the liver used to describe

A

describe patterns of liver injury

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3
Q

which zone of the liver is most vulnerable to injury

A

zone 3 - pericentral

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4
Q

describe the liver and injury

A

very resistant to injury

large functional reserve

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5
Q

healing of the liver

A

can produce severe parenchymal necrosis but heal entirely by restitution
some injuries may leave permanent damage

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6
Q

pathogenesis of cirrhosis

A

insult to hepatocytes
grading - inflammation
staging - fibrosis
cirrhosis

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7
Q

how may the hepatocytes be insulted

A

viral
drug
toxin
antibodies

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8
Q

describe acute liver failure

A

the acute onset of jaundice (many patients with severe liver disease are not jaundiced)

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9
Q

causes of acute liver failure

A

viruses - hepatitis
alcohol
drugs
bile duct obstruction

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10
Q

consequences of acute liver failure

A

complete recovery
chronic liver disease
death

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11
Q

describe jaundice

A

yellowing of skin

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12
Q

why does skin turn yellow in jaundice

A

bilirubin

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13
Q

how is jaundice classified

A

site and type

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14
Q

classification by site of jaundice

A

pre-hepatic
hepatic
post-hepatic

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15
Q

classification by type of jaundice

A

conjugated

unconjugated

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16
Q

describe pre-hepatic jaundice

A

there is too much haem to break down;

unconjugated bilirubin

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17
Q

causes of pre-hepatic jaundice

A

Haemolysis of all causes

haemolytic anaemias

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18
Q

describe hepatic jaundice

A

liver cells injured or dead

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19
Q

causes of hepatic jaundice

A
acute liver failure 
alcohol hepatitis 
cirrhosis 
bile duct loss
pregnancy
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20
Q

how may the bile duct be lost

A

atresia
Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC)
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC)

21
Q

describe post-hepatic jaundice

A

bile cannot escape into bowel

22
Q

causes of post-hepatic jaundice

A

congenital biliary atresia
gallstones blocking common bile duct
strictures of common bile duct
tumours (carcinoid head of pancreas)

23
Q

define cirrhosis of the liver

A

bands of fibrosis sporting regenerative nodules of hepatocytes (massons trichrome stain)
macro nodular or micro nodular (alcoholic)
alteration of hepatic microvasculature
loss of hepatic function

24
Q

describe cirrhosis of the liver

A

final common endpoint for liver disease

it is irreversible

25
Q

causes of cirrhosis of the liver

A
alcohol !!!
hepatitis B and C and other virsuses
iron overload
autoimmune disease
gallstones
26
Q

complications of cirrhosis

A
portal hypertension
low albumin  
reduced metabolic capacity 
shunting of blood by-passing liver
ascites
liver faillure
27
Q

features of portal hypertension

A

oesophageal varices
caput medusa
haemorrhoids

28
Q

causes of portal hypertension

A

haemodynamic abnormalities proximal or distal to sinusoids or sinusoidal level
portal vein thrombosis

29
Q

post-sinusoidal causes of portal hypertension

A

budd-chiari syndrome

30
Q

sinusoidal causes of portal hypertension

A

cirrhosis

31
Q

pre-sinusoidal causes of portal hypertension

A
portal fibrosis 
sarcoidosis 
schistosomiasis 
hepatoportal sclerosis 
cirrhosis
32
Q

clinical features of cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A
oedema 
ascites
haematemesis 
spider nave gynaecomastia 
purport and bleeding 
coma 
infection
33
Q

pathology of oedema in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

reduced albumin synthesis - hypoalbuminaemia

34
Q

pathology of ascites in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

hypoalbuminaemia
secondary hyperaldosteronsim
portal hypertension

35
Q

pathology of haematemesis in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

ruptured oesophageal varices - portal hypertension

36
Q

pathology of spider navi gynaecomastia in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

hyeroestrogenism

37
Q

pathology of purport and bleeding in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

reduced clotting factor synthesis

38
Q

pathology of coma in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

failure to eliminate toxic gut bacterial metabolites

39
Q

pathology if infection in cirrhosis and chronic liver failure

A

reduced Kupffer cell number and function

40
Q

describe alcoholic liver disease

A

fatty liver - pathology is dependent on extent of alcohol abuse and individual factors
reversible to an extent

41
Q

pathogenesis of alcoholic liver disease

A

increased peripheral release of fatty acids and increased synthesis of fatty acids and triglycerides within liver cells
acetaldehyde causes cell injury, manifested by formation of Mallory’s hyalin
increased collagen synthesis by fibroblasts and perisinusoidal cells of Ito

42
Q

microscopy of alcoholic fatty liver disease - a weekend binge

A

fat vacuoles appear clear in hepatocytes

43
Q

microscopy of alcoholic fatty liver disease - heavy drinking for weeks to months

A

hepatocyte necrosis
neutrophils
mallory bodies
pericelluar fibrosis

44
Q

microscopy of alcoholic fatty liver disease - heavy drinking for months to years

A

collagen is layer down around cells

45
Q

outcome of alcoholic live disease

A
cirrhosis 
portal hypertension - varies, ascites etc.
malnutrition 
hepatocellular carcinoma
social disintegration
46
Q

describe non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)

A

pathologically identical to alcoholic liver disease but seen In non-drinkers

47
Q

who gets NASH

A

diabetics
obese
hyperlipidaemia

48
Q

outcomes of NASH

A

fibrosis

cirrhosis