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LIVER, GALLBLADDER, PANCREAS. Liver Jaundice Hepatitis Cirrhosis Tumors Gallbladder Pancreas. LIVER ANATOMY. Central area. Portal area. LIVER MICROSCOPIC. Duct. Vein. Artery. HEPATIC INJURY. Degeneration or accumulation Necrosis Inflammation Regeneration Fibrosis.
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LIVER, GALLBLADDER, PANCREAS • Liver • Jaundice • Hepatitis • Cirrhosis • Tumors • Gallbladder • Pancreas
LIVER ANATOMY Central area Portal area
LIVER MICROSCOPIC Duct Vein Artery
HEPATIC INJURY • Degeneration or accumulation • Necrosis • Inflammation • Regeneration • Fibrosis
JAUNDICE • Excess bilirubin >2-3 mg/dl • Bilirubin metabolism • Unconjugated • Conjugated
JAUNDICE • Increase bilirubin production • Decreased hepatic uptake • Impaired conjugation • Impaired hepatic excretion • Cholestasis • Intrahepatic: cell injury • Extrahepatic: duct obstruction
VIRAL HEPATITIS • Hepatitis A • Hepatitis B • Hepatitis C • Hepatitis D • Hepatitis E • Hepatitis G • EBV, CMV, Herpes
HEPATITIS A • Common • RNA virus • Fecal or oral transmission • Incubation 15-45 days • No carrier or chronic disease
HEPATITIS B • DNA virus • Parenteral / sexual spread • Incubation 30-180 days • Serology • Carrier, chronic, cirrhosis • Risk malignancy • Vaccine
HEPATITIS C • RNA virus • Incubation 7-8 weeks • Parenteral, sexual spread • Carrier, chronic, cirrhosis • Risk malignancy • No vaccine
OTHER HEPATITIS VIRUSES • Hepatitis D • RNA virus • Associated with hepatitis B • Hepatitis E • Rare in the U.S. • RNA virus • Waterborne? • Hepatitis G (RNA similar to C) • ? Prevalence and significance • WHAT’S NEXT?????
ACUTE VIRAL HEPATITIS • Resolution in 8 weeks • Symptoms • Histology • Panlobular disarray • Inflammation • Hepatocyte necrosis • Fulminant: massive necrosis • Can become chronic
CHRONIC HEPATITIS • Abnormal liver function for >6 weeks • No longer use terms chronic active or chronic persistent • Grade activity and stage • Determine etiology
CIRRHOSIS • Cirrhosis • Diffuse • Fibrosis • Regeneration hepatocytes • Etiology • Fatty liver disease 60-70% • Viral 10%
CIRRHOSIS • Others • Biliary diseases • Metabolic/ genetic • Cryptogenic
CIRRHOSIS H&E Trichrome
CIRRHOSIS • Nonspecific symptoms • Liver failure • Portal hypertension • Ascites • Collateral venous channels • Splenomegaly • Neoplasm
CIRRHOSIS Esophageal varix Ascites
CIRRHOSIS- Fatty Liver Disease • ETOH Pathogenesis • Toxin • Nutritional deprivation • Other • Obesity • DM • Medications
HEMOCHROMATOSIS • Iron: liver, pancreas, heart + • Genetic • Homozygous recessive • Chromosome 6 • Secondary overload
HEMOCHROMATOSIS • Morphology • Hemosideron • Fibrosis • Treatment • Phlebotomy
WILSON’S DISEASE • Accumulation of copper; liver, brain, eyes • Autosomal rec • Morphology • Acute / chronic • Steatosis • Necrosis • Cirrhosis • Chelation D-Penicillamine
HEPATIC TUMORS • Benign and malignant • Cysts • Bile ducts • Blood vessel • Hepatocyte • Metastases
BILE DUCT NEOPLASMS • Bile duct adenoma • Gray nodule incidental finding • Bland proliferation ducts • Bile duct carcinoma • Thorotrast, liver fluke • Poor prognosis, late detection
HEPATOCELLULAR ADENOMA • Benign • Association with oral contraceptives • Presentation • Acute abdomen • Intra-abdominal bleed • Histology: bland hepatocytes and no bile ducts
HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA- HEPATOMA • Malignant • Most common primary adults • Aflatoxin, cirrhosis, Hep B & C • Serum alpha-fetaprotein • Histology • Atypical hepatocytes • More than 2-3 cell plates • Poor prognosis
METASTATIC TUMORS • Often multiple nodules • Any primary- GI, lung, breast • CEA may be elevated if metastatic colon • Histology of primary tumor
BILIARY SYSTEMANATOMY • Gallbladder • Fundus • Body • Neck • 60-70% common orifice with pancreatic duct
BILIARY SYSTEMANATOMY • Microscopic- no mm or submucosa • Mucosa • Fibromuscular layer • Subserosal fat • Serosa • Physiology • Concentration • Delivery
CHOLELITHIASIS • Common- 10-20% of adults • Most gallstones silent • Association with inflamed gallbladder • Complications
CHOLELITHIASIS - STONE FORMATION • Pathogenesis • Supersaturation • Initiation • Growth • Types • Cholesterol (85% radiolucent) • Bilirubin (50-75% radiopaque)
CHOLELITHIASISRISK FACTORS • Cholesterol stones • Ethnicity • Age / sex • Diet / drugs • Pigment stones • Chronic hemolysis • Cirrhosis • Biliary infection
CHOLELITHIASISCOMPLICATIONS • Obstruction • Biliary colic • Cholecystitis • Gallstone illeus • May predispose to cancer?
CHOLECYSTITIS • 4th- 6th decade, F > M • Acute • Severe RUQ pain • Chemical, bacterial, reflux • Neutrophils, gangrene? • Chronic • Vague symptoms • Stones (90%) • Fibrosis, chronic inflammation • Acalculous
TUMORSGALLBLADDER • Carcinoma • 5th among GI malignancies • Peak incidence in 7th decade • Whites > blacks, F > M • 65-90% associated stones • Adenocarcinoma, poor survival
PANCREASANATOMY Exocrine – acini and ducts Endocrine - islets
ETIOLOGYACUTE PANCREATITIS • Cholelithiasis • Alcoholism • Trauma • Drugs • Septisemia, infection • Metabolic: hyper – Ca++ and lipids • Idiopathic