LFT / Jaundice / Gallstones Flashcards

1
Q

ALT
AST
ALP
GGT

A

ALT: Alanine transaminase (3-40 iu/l) (skeletal muscle, cardiac, kidneys)

AST: asperate aminotransferase (3-30iu/l) also raises in liver damage but if ALT not raised, likely to be other cause. produced by liver, skeletal muscle, cardiac, brain, RBC. in alcoholic liver disease AST>ALT

ALP: alkaline phosphatase (30-100umol/l) (<120)
biliary epithelium, bone, 3rd-trimester placenta, intestine, kidney (raised in biliary obstruction)

GGT: gamma-glutamyl transferase (8-60u/l) (liver-specific not sensitive, lots of things make it raise even sneezing) *monitor in abstinence for alcohol

*can help distinguish between hepatocellular damage and cholestasis

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2
Q

Assessing liver funcion

A

Bilirubin (3-17 umol/l)
Albumin (35-50 g/l)
Prothrombin time (10-14 s/l)

Amylase- pancreas
Lipase- pancreas

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3
Q

ALT

A

A raised ALT indicated hepatocellular damage
>x10

ALT > AST chronic liver disease
AST > ALT cirrhosis and acute alcohol hepatitis

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4
Q

ALP

A

ALP is concentrated in the liver, bile duct and bone tissue
Raises if there is obstruction/cholestasis
>x3

enzyme that hydrolyses phosphotaseester

*isolated raised ALP
boney metastases/sarcoma
vitamin d deficiency
recent bone fracture
renal osteodysotrophy
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5
Q

GGT

A

Gamma Glutamyl Transferase
If there is a raise in the ALP, check the GGT

raised GGT:
bile flow obstruction
biliary epithelial damage
alcohol and drugs (phentoin)

if ALP is raised but GGT normal= bone

if ALP raised, GGT raised= cholestasis

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6
Q

jaundice in

  • pre hepatic
  • hepatic
  • post hepatic
A

pre hepatic: normal urine and normal stools (unconjugated bilirubin

hepatic: dark urine, normal stools

post hepatic: dark urine and pale stools because the bile and pancreatic lipase cannot reach the bowel - poor absorption (pale bulky stools)

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7
Q

albumin

A

synthesised in the liver
helps bind to water
oncotic pressure

  • cirrhosis= decrease in the production of albumin (ascites)
  • inflammation: in high temperature, there is a decrease in the production of albumin
  • loss of albumin in nephrotic syndrome
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8
Q

acute hepatocellular damage

A
  • poisoning (paracetamol OD)
  • infection (hepatits a/b)
  • liver ischaemia

ALT very raised
ALP, GGT, bilirubin high

DILI: drug-induced liver injury
commonly- flucloxacillin, co amoxiclav

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9
Q

differentials if all LFT raised:

A
congestive heart failure
obstructive
jaundice
pre hepatic obstruction
cholangiocarcinoma
head of pancreas tumor
pancreatitis
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10
Q

interpreting LFT’s

A
  1. ALT and ALP
    (ALT >AST chronic liver disease)
    AST> ALT cirrhosis / acute alcohol hepatitis
    AST > ALP hepatitis
    ALP > AST cholestatic
    high amylase- pancreas
    AST normal ALT unlikely to be due to liver.
  2. GGT
    if there is a raise in ALP, chek GGT. bile flow obstruction
    high ALP, high GGT= cholestasis
    high ALP, normal GGT= boney metastases.
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11
Q

bilirubin

A

RBC live for 120 days
then phagocytosed by macrophages into heme and globin

globin= amino acids
heme- protophoryn

protophoryn ic converted to unconjugated bilrubin

taken to liver = conjugated by UDP. water soluable, stored in bile duct

formation: haem (RBC)
metabolism: unconjugated binds to albumin. hepatocytes conjugated bilirubin (UDP glucosyl transferase enzyme)
conjugated is transferred to bile canaliculi
in the colon - bacteria degrades conjugated bilirubin to urobilinogen and stercobilinogen

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12
Q

pre haptic jaundice

A

increased load of bilirubin

causes:
haemolysis, malaria, haemoltyic anaemia, septicaemia
Gilbert syndrome (low UGT)
Crigler Najjar (no UGT)
Dubin Johnson (deficiency in the protein which moves CB from liver to bile)
physiological jaundice of the newborn

signs:
normal urine and normal stools (unconjugated bilirubin)
if bilirubin >2.5mg/dl yellow sin

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13
Q

hepatic jaundice

A
hepatocellular jaundice
(raised ALT, ALP, AST)

drugs, alcohol, viral hepatitis, autoimmune, metabolic, hereditary, viral hepatitis

high UCB and CB

signs: dark urine (CB) normal stools

viral hepatitis
autoimmune hepatitis
drugs/toxins (paracetemol OD)
alcohol

rarer-
metabolic disorders
hereditary haemochromatosis
Wilson's disease
alpha 1 antitrpsyin deficiency
primary hepatoma
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14
Q

post hepatic jaundice

A

cannot excrete (conjugated) bilirubin due to an obstruction e..g gall stones, pancreatic carcinoma

bile (conjugated bilirubin) builds up, leaks between hepatocytes in the blood vessels.

obstructive- high ALP, high GGT

  1. extra hepatic
    mechanical obstrction (gallstones)
    malignancy
    pancreatitis (acute/chronic)
2. intrahepatic
primary biliary cirrhosis
primary sclerosing cholangitis
sarcoidosis
pregnancy
drugs/alcohol
dubin johnson syndrome
rotor syndrome

signs:
pale stools, dark urine (bile flow is obstructed)
pruritis (bile salts)

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15
Q

haemolytic jaundice

A

jaundice, anaemia
raised UCB

low hb, low haptoglobin, raised reticulocyte in haemolytic jaundice

ALT, ALP, GGT normal
*a type of prehepatic jaundice

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16
Q

pancreatitis

A

epigastric pain which radiates to the back

raised lipase and amylase (pancreatic enzymes)

causes: I GET SMASHED

17
Q

hepatitis

A

fever, RUQ pain, jaundice, dark urine
raised ALT, raised AST, high ALP (ALT>AST)

hep A: faecal oral. incubatino is 2-4 weeks. flu, jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly

hep B: blood/bodily fluids. mom-child viral transmission. incubation 6-20 weeks

hep C: blood/bodily fluids/IV drug use. incubation 6-9 weeks

hep D: bodily fluids. can only co-infect if hep b+ve

18
Q

liver disease clinical signs

A
ascites
hepatic encephalopathy (ammonia)
portal hypertension
palmar erythema
gynaecomastia in men
menstural irregularities
GI varices
spider naevi
brusing
hepatorenal syndrome
19
Q

UGT activity

A

hepatic impaired conjugation of bilirubin

inherited: Gilbert syndrome, Crigler Najjar type I and II

glucuronidation can be inherited/acquired by certain drugs.

20
Q

autoimmune hepatitis

A

primarily affects females
(commonly have other immune diseases like thyroid disease)

LFT hepatic: raised AST
hyperglobulinaemia (elevated IgG)
non-specific autoantibodies0 antinuclear antibodies

diagnose on liver biopsy

tx; immunosuppressive therapy (prednisolone)
(azathioprine therapy)

21
Q

Gilbert syndrome

A

bengin condition
isolated, mild unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia (<80)
autosomal dominant inhertiance
most common of the hereditary hyperbilirubinaemias of the population

more common in males
jaundice if illl/fasting

reduction in UGT

22
Q
  1. Cholelithiasis
  2. cholecystitis
  3. choledocolithiasis
  4. cholangitis
A
  1. presence of gallstones in the gallbladder
  2. inflammation of the gallbladder after a cystic duct obstruction
  3. gall stones in the common bile duct
  4. inflammation/infection of biliary tract
23
Q

cholelithiasis

A

gallstones in the gallbladder (oversaturation and precipitation)

RUQ pain <6 hours
diagnose with US (posterior acoustic shadow)
treatement: elective cholecystectomy

24
Q

types and content of bile

A
  1. cholestrol (yellow) cholestrol and bile salts
  2. bilirubin/pigmented: unconjugated bbilirubin binds wiht calcium (black stones on xray)
  3. brown stones (infected) infection of the gallbladder/bile duct. bacteria brings hydrolyti enzymes that hydrolyste the bilirubin and phosphates.
bile salts
acids
cholestrol
phospholipids
protein
bilirubin
water
electrolyte
bicarbonate
25
Q

cholecystitis

A

inflammation of the gallbladder as a stone has been lodged in the cystic duct

RUQ pain- shifts to shoulder
dull and achey
mid epigastric pain
nausea and vomiting
Murphey's sign (rebound tenderness)
raised CRP
raised WBC
bile stasis irritates the mucosa

investigate: US, ERCP
treat: IV abx, IV fluids, analgesia, cholecystecomty

26
Q

Murphey’s sign

A

ask the patient to take deep breathe in
diaphragm goes down
put hand underneath
pain- makes the patient stop breathing

27
Q

choledocolithiasis

A

gallstone migrates into the common bile duct

RUQ >6 hours
ALP, AST, ALT and total bilirubin is raised

investigation: US dilated, ERCP, MRCP
* obstructive jaundice

28
Q

cholangitis

A

infection of the biliary tract due to bile stasis (from an gallstone)

e.coli, klibsella, entercoccus

Charcot’s triad: fever, RUQ pain, jaundice,

Reynolds pentad +confusion +hypotension

bloods: WBC, CRP, ALP, AST, AST
US
IV abx
urgent biliary decompression