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Chronic Liver Disease

Glucose homeostasis; glycogenolysis & gluconeogenesis. Catabolism of hormones and other serum proteins. Chronic Liver Disease. Synthesis: Albumin Coagulation factors. Katharine Brown. Storage: Glycogen Iron Cu, Iron, vitamins. Bile excretion. Objectives.

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Chronic Liver Disease

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  1. Glucose homeostasis; glycogenolysis & gluconeogenesis Catabolism of hormones and other serum proteins Chronic LiverDisease • Synthesis: • Albumin • Coagulation factors Katharine Brown • Storage: • Glycogen • Iron • Cu, Iron, vitamins Bile excretion

  2. Objectives • Causes and management of chronic liver disease • Management of an UGI Bleed • Key features of less common types of chronic liver disease

  3. A patient case… 54 year old gentleman presents to his GP with increasing swelling of his abdomen and feet over the last 2 months. He has been increasing tired over this time and feels nauseous and is off his food. His wife has commented that his eyes have turned yellow over the last few days. He works in a warehouse and smokes 10 cigarettes a day. He admits to drinking 4 cans of lager a night. His wife says he drinks at least 8 cans a night and a bottle of whisky a week. On examination he is jaundiced but has no hepatic flap and is orientated in time, place and person. His abdomen is distended but soft and non-tender. There is no palpable organomegaly but there is shifting dullness. What are your main differential diagnoses for this gentleman?

  4. Differential Diagnoses • (Decompensated) Alcoholic liver disease • Viral liver disease • Autoimmune liver disease, Wilson’s, HH etc • Hepatocellular Carcinoma • Pancreatic Cancer • Cryptogenic Liver Cirrhosis What further history would be needed? What signs would you look for on examination?

  5. Signs of CLD

  6. How would you investigate this patient? Bedside • Observations, BM, fluid balance, weight Blood tests • LFTs (pre/post) (including albumin), INR • FBC, U&Es, CRP • Liver screen: autoantibodies, alpha-1 antitrypsin, caeruloplasmin, serum copper, ferritin, viral hepatitis serology Imaging • US abdomen + portal vein doppler • CXR, CT, MRI, MRCP Special tests • Ascitic tap, OGD (oesophageal varices), liver biopsy

  7. What is your management plan? Conservative • Alcohol abstinence, optimise nutrition, low salt diet, fluid restriction Medical • Vitamin B supplementation (IV/PO), chlordiazepoxide • Diuretics • Paracentesis (give albumin) • NG feeding • Antibiotics (? SBP) • Steroids + albumin (N.B. avoid NaCl) • Lactulose (in hepatic encephalopathy) Surgical • TIPSS • Liver transplantation

  8. Complications of CLD • Portal hypertension: oesophageal varices, ascites • SBP • Hepatic encephalopathy (constipation, GI bleed, infection, renal failure) • Hepatocellular carcinoma • Coagulopathy • Hepato-renal syndrome • Liver failure • 5 year survival rate in cirrhotic CLD 50% • Child Pugh Score: bilirubin, INR, albumin, ascites, hepatic encephalopathy

  9. Hepatic Encephalopathy • Stage 1: shorted attention span, reversal of sleep-wake cycle, subtle personality changes (anxiety, irritability) • Stage 2: lethargy, personality change, disorientation. Asterixis. • Stage 3: stupor but responsive, severe confusion and disorientation, abnormal behaviour, incomprehensible speech • Stage 4: coma

  10. Acute GI Bleeds • ABC - Protect airway - High flow O2 - Haemodynamically stable? - Bloods (Hb, Urea, Crossmatch 4-6 units), ABG - Fluid resuscitation – anything, blood is best • Correct clotting abnormalities (vitamin K, FFP) • Emergency endoscopy: banding, adrenaline injections • Terlipressin • IV omeprazole, antibiotics Rockall Risk Score: Age, Co-morbidities, Shock, Diagnosis, evidence of bleeding (OGD)

  11. CLD Aetiology Surgical Sieve • Viral • Autoimmune - Autoimmune hepatitis, PBC, PSC • Genetic - Wilson’s, Haemochromatosis, Alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency • Toxic / Drugs – alcoholic, paracetamol • Non-alcoholic fatty liver (DM / metabolic syndrome, pregnancy, idiopathic)

  12. Hepatitis B & C HBV DNA = infectious HBsAg = currently infected Anti-HBs + Anti-HBc = past infection Anti-HBs alone = vaccinated

  13. Autoimmune Hepatitis • Autoantibodies against hepatocytes • Young/middle age, mainly women • Presentation: jaundice, RUQ pain, systemic symptoms • May be associated with other autoimmune conditions • Investigations - Type 1: anti-smooth muscle antibodies (80%), anti-nuclear antibodies (10%) - Type 2 (children): anti-liver/kidney microsomal type 1 antibodies - Liver biopsy • Rx: immunosuppressant's (steroids, azathioprine), transplant

  14. PBC and PSC Primary Biliary Cirrhosis • Chronic granulomatous inflammation of interlobular bile ducts • Autoimmune: anti-mitochrondrial antibody (98%) • Associated with other autoimmune conditions • F:M 9:1, 50 y/o Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis • Inflammation, fibrosis and strictures (‘beading’) of intra and extra-hepatic bile ducts • ? Autoimmune: ANCA (80%) • Associated with IBD • 20-30% develop cholangiocarcinoma

  15. Wilson’s & α1AT Deficiency Wilson’s Disease • AR defect in copper transporting ATPase • Copper accumulates in liver + CNS + Kayser-Fleischer rings • Rx: penicillamine, transplant Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency • AR deficiency of α1AT • Serine protease inhibitor produced by liver • Emphysema + liver damage + HCC

  16. Hereditory Haemochromatosis • Defect in HFE causes increased intestinal iron absorption • Iron accumulates in liver, joints (arthralgia), pancreas (bronze diabetes), heart (dilated cardiomyopathy), pituitary (hypogonadism), adrenals, skin • Ix: LFTs, serum ferritin, iron, transferrin saturation, TIBC, HFE genotyping, glucose, x-ray joints, liver biopsy (Perl’s stain), MRI liver, ECG, Echo • Rx: venesection, low iron diet, treat diabetes, heart failure etc. Genetic screen relatives.

  17. Summary • Alcoholic liver disease is the most common type of CLD • Treatment of ALD is mostly supportive with treatment of the complications; optimising nutrition and fluid balance is key. • There are three autoimmune forms of CLD • In Wilson’s disease copper accumulates in the liver and CNS • In HH iron accumulates in the liver, skin, joints, pituitary, adrenals, pancreas, heart etc. • Liver transplant is usually the only cure in chronic liver disease Any Questions?

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