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CHRONIC HEPATITIS. The contours of the liver and spleen as well as the gall bladder in the right and left hypochondrium. THE ANATOMY OF THE PORTAL VENOUS SYSTEM. CHRONIC HEPATITIS. Chronic hepatitis is generally defined as disease that has lasted for 6 months or longer. Inflammation.
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The contours of the liver and spleen as wellas the gall bladder in the right and left hypochondrium
CHRONIC HEPATITIS Chronic hepatitis is generally defined as disease that has lasted for 6 months or longer
Inflammation Walls of scar tissue begin to form Healthy liver cells become trapped by a wall of scar tissue
CYTOLYTIC SYNDROME • alanine aminotransferase increased, • aspartate aminotransferase increased • Increased LDH • Increased ferritin • Hyperbilirubiemia
abdominalmass (e.g. cancer) biliaryatresiaandotherpediatricliverdiseases biliarytrauma congenitalanomaliesofthebiliarytract gallstones intrahepaticcholestasisofpregnancy (obstetriccholestasis) primarybiliarycirrhosis, anautoimmunedisorder primarysclerosingcholangitis, associatedwithinflammatoryboweldisease somedrugs, (e.g. flucloxacillinanderythromycin) ABCC2 genepolymorphism Alkalinephosphatase elevations of serum bile acid levels elevatedlevelsofGammaGlutamylTransferase [GGT] itchiness (pruritus). Pruritus is the primary symptom of cholestasis jaundice. pale stool. This symptom implies obstructive cholestasis. darkurine Cholestasis
Mesenchymal inflammation Hepatocellularinsufficiency • Hyper-γ globulinemia • CRP • ESR • Albumin • Transferrine • Cholesterol • protro,mbine • Cholinesterasa • Α-lipoproteins • Hyperbilirubinemia
CHRONIC HEPATITIS CLASSIFICATION • Chronic Viral Hepatitis B • Chronic Viral Hepatitis C • Chronic Viral Hepatitis D • Chronic Viral Hepatitis nonidentificated • Autoimmune Hepatitis (type 1, 2 ,3) • Toxic Hepatitis, Drug-Induced Hepatitis • Cryptogenic Hepatitis • Alcoholic Hepatitis • Metabolic Hepatitis • Cholestatic Hepatitis • Nonspecific Reactive Hepatitis
Grades of Inflammationand Stages of Fibrosis on Liver Biopsies
CHRONIC HEPATITIS CLASSIFICATIONACCORDING TO SEVERITY (level of Aminotransferases)
CHRONIC HEPATITISCOMPLICATIONS • HEPATIC ENCEPHALOPATHY • VARICEAL BLEEDING • ASCITES • GLOMERULONEPHRITIS • OTHERS
General Concepts • Hepatitis = 'inflammation of the liver'. • six medically important viruses are commonly described as “hepatitis viruses”: HAV,HBV,HCV,HDV,HEV,HGV.
Viral Hepatitis - Historical Perspectives Enterically transmitted “Infectious” A E Viral hepatitis NANB Parenterally transmitted B D C “Serum” F, G, TTV ? other
CHRONIC VIRALHEPATITIS • 5 to 10% of cases of hepatitis В (with or without hepatitis D virus co-infection) • and about 75% of cases of hepatitis C become chronic. • Infection with hepatitis A virus or hepatitis E virus is not a cause of ChronicHepatitis.
HBV Structure & Antigens Dane particle HBsAg = surface (coat) protein ( 4 phenotypes : adw, adr, ayw and ayr) HBcAg = inner core protein (a single serotype) HBeAg= secreted protein; function unknown
Possible Outcomes of HBV Infection Acute hepatitis B infection 3-5% of adult-acquiredinfections 95% of infant-acquired infections Chronic HBV infection Chronic hepatitis 12-25% in 5 years Cirrhosis 20-23% in 5 years 6-15% in 5 years Hepatocellularcarcinoma Liver failure Liver transplant Death Death
CHRONIC VIRALHEPATITIS • Hepatitis B virusandhepatitis C virusarethemajorcausesofchronichepatitisintheworld. • Approximately 80% ofindividualsinfectedwith HCV willbecomechroniccarriers, ofwhom a majoritywilldevelop a degreeofliverdamagerangingfromfattylivertocirrhosis. • Chronic HBV and HCV infectionpredisposepatientstodevelopinghepatocellularcarcinoma.
Only 20% will show symptoms Initially ! Natural History of Hep C 20% Clear the Virus Chronic Infection Acute Infection Healthy Liver 80% Virus Continues to Damage Liver Adapted from Lauer and Walker, NEJM 2001
Natural History Con’t Liver Cancer 1-4%/year Cirrhosis 20-30% Chronic Hepatitis Most symptoms begin to show only when liver is more severely damaged
AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS • Patientswithseverediseasewhoare treatedwithcorticosteroidshave a 10-year survivalrateof 60% to 70%, whereasuntreatedpatientshave a survivalrateoflessthan 30%.
Autoimmune HepatitisHistology • Lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate • Interface hepatitis Portal inflammation and invasion of limiting plate
Autoimmune HepatitisHistology • Prominent lobular infiltrate composed of mononuclear and plasma cells Lobular infiltrate
Autoimmune HepatitisHistology • Prominent plasma cells appreciated in this specimen Plasma cells
DRUG-INDUCED CHRONIC HEPATITIS Hepatotoxic drugs: - Paracetamol - Isoniazid - Oestrogens - Antibiotics -Methotrexate -others
DIVERSITY > 1000 Hepatotoxic drugs Diverse mechanisms Variety of liver diseases
METABOLIC ACTIVATION Drug CYP Reactive metabolite (High Amounts) • (Low Amounts) Extensive covalent binding GSH Protein Immune reactions Direct toxicity
MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION Drugs Beta- oxidation Respi- ration Cell dysfunction Cell death Lactic acidosis Steatosis
FATTY LIVER Fatty Liver • Fat droplets appear in the cytoplasm ofhepatocytes; • they may appear a few daysafter an alcohol binge, but are almostalways present in heavy drinkers (> 80 gof alcohol per day for > 5 years). • Fattyliver may occur, however, with obesity,diabetes mellitus, starvation and chronichepatitis C virus infection
ALCOHOLIC HEPATITIS • Alcohol abuse is a massive international problem which has huge resource implicationsboth for the community as a whole and also for health care. • Alcohol is enjoyed by many and used safely by the majority of people who drink it. • Alcohol abuse may be denied or not recognized by individuals or their families andfriends. • Alcohol damages not only the liver, but many other organs also.
Altered membrane proteins Neoantigens formation Impaired cytoskeletal transport Stimulation of HSC Immunological injury Damage to cell membranes Alcoholic Hepatitis Mechanisms of liver injury Free radicals Oxidative injury Heat Gut Permeability Endotoxaemia Kupfer cell activation Gultathione depletion ROS & Free radicals TNFα Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) Peroxisomal Catalase Genetics Polymorphisms Male vs Female Race Damage Acetaldehyde Ethanol Miscrosomal ethanol-oxidising system (CYP 2E1) Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase Downregulated in chronic alcohol use TNFα IL-1, IL-8 Acetate
ALCOHOLIC HEPATITIS • Alcoholicliverdiseasemaydevelopinwomenafterlessalcoholconsumptionthanisnecessarytocausehepatitis or cirrhosisinmen. • Dailyalcoholconsumptionofapproximately 50 g for 10 to 15 yearsisassociatedwithalcoholicliverdisease inwomen, whereas 80 gisassociated withalcoholiccirrhosis inmen.
Pathology of Alcoholic Hepatitis Mallorys Hyaline Centrilobular necrosis Fatty change Hepatocyte ballooning PMN infiltrate Pericellular fibrosis
ALCOHOLIC HEPATITIS • AlcoholichepatitisreferstothepathologicMallorystainfindingsofalcoholichyalinsurroundedbypolymorphonuclearcellinflammation
CHRONIC HEPATITISDIAGNOSIS LABORATORY SYNDROMES: • Cytolitic syndrome (↑AST, ↑ALT, ↑GGT, ↑Bilirubin ) • Cholestatic syndrome (↑conjugated Bilirubin, ↑Alkalinephosphatase, ↑GGT, ↑cholesterol) • Liver cellular insufficiency syndrome (↓Albumine, ↓prothrombin, ↓cholesterol, ↓fibrinogen) • Mesenchyme-inflammatory syndrome (↑ESR, ↑ﻻ-globulins, ↑timol test ↑Le, ↑C-react. protein) • Hypersplenism(anemia, thrombocytopenia, leukocytopenia)
CHRONIC VIRAL HEPATITISTREATMENT • ANTIVIRAL THERAPY (Interferon therapy, Lamivudine therapy) • Corticosteroids are contraindicated, because viral replication is enhanced