1 / 21

Liver disease

Liver disease. Hana Maxová Department of Pathophysiology 2nd Faculty of Medicine Charles University in Prague. Liver disease. I nflammation. Alcohol. Autoimunne d. Acute x Chronic Focal x Diffuse Mild x Severe Reversible x Irreversible. Toxins. Innate diseases. Acute.

varana
Download Presentation

Liver disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Liver disease Hana Maxová Department of Pathophysiology 2nd Faculty of Medicine Charles University in Prague

  2. Liver disease Inflammation Alcohol Autoimunne d. Acute x Chronic Focal x Diffuse Mild x Severe Reversible x Irreversible Toxins Innate diseases Acute Chronic Rightside card. failure Cirhosis Liver failure

  3. Liver organization Liver lobule Portaltriad - hepaticartery - bileduct - portalvein Centralvein Liver acinus Zone I - periportal II - intermedial III - central

  4. Liver organization • Hepatocyte (apical, basolateral • membrane) • Endothelialcells • Kupffercells(macrophages) • Stellatecells(Itocells) • Space of Disse • Uniquefeatures: • - fenestratedendothelia • lack of a typicalbesementmembrane • lowpressurecircuit

  5. Liver dysfunction 1. Protein metabolism Albumin Bloodcoagulationfactors (II,VII, IX, X - vit. K, fibrinogen) Transport proteins (transferrin, steroids, thyroxine) Acutephasereactantproteins (1 – antitrypsin, ceruloplasmin, haptoglobin, CRP) Aminoacids  ammonia -  urea synthesis, circulationwithouttraversinghepaticsinusoids (encephalopathy) aromatic -  degradation x  branchedchain -  peripheralutilization (musles) 2. Carbohydratemetabolism Hyperglycemia (porto-systemicshunting, insulinoresistance) Hypoglycemia ( in hepatocellularmass, end-stage of failure) 3. Lipid metabolism Dyslipoproteinemia  HDL,  LDL,  cholesterol – effect of cholestasis fattyliver - accumulation of triglycerides (imbalancebetweensynthesis and secretion) 4. Hormone metabolism Estrogens- gynecomastia  Renin, Hyperaldosteronism - sodiumretention

  6. Liver dysfunction 5. Bilirubin and bileacidsmetabolism Icterus– prehapatic, hepatic, posthepatic Enterohepatalcirculation of bileacids Cholestasis - intrahepatic, extrahepatic Malabsorption - dietarylipids (steatorhoe) and fat-solublevitamins (K) Biliarycirhosis

  7. Liver functiontests Dg: combinationof history, physicalexamination, laboratorytesting, radiologicalstudies, biopsy ALT – damagedhepatocytes AST – lessspecific (heartattack) ALP – non specific (bone, kidney, intestine, bileducts) GGT – sensitive (bileducts, alcohol) Bilirubin Albumin PT (prothrombintime), INR Serum protein electrophoresis (ratio abumin/globulin) SerumIg (IgM – primarybiliarycirhosis, IgA –alcoholic, IgG – chronicactive hepatitis) Specificantibodies Ammonia AFP Child-Pughscore

  8. Acute liver failure The rapid development of hepatocellular dysfunction, specifically coagulopathy and mental status changes (encephalopathy) in a patient without known prior liver disease Etiology: Acute HBV infection, HDV superinfection, atypical – cytomegalovirus, EBV, Herpes simplex Paracetamol overdose, drugs - ecstasy, mushroomtoxins Metabolicdiseases (Wilson's disease, Reye´ssyndrome, alpha 1 antitrypsin defficiency) Vascular (Budd–Chiari syndrome, heartfailure, shock) Pathogenesis: NO, bacterial endotoxin, TNF, IL-1, IL-6, hyperamonemia, multisystem organ failure Complications: Cerebraledema Hepatorenalsy ARDS (hypoxemia, hyperventilation, respiratoryalcalosis) Bleeding (GIT) Sepsis ABR and electrolytesdysbalance (respiratoryalcalosis, metab. acdidosis, hyponatremia, hypokalemia) Fulminant hepatitis

  9. Chronic hepatitis • One of several types of liver disease persisting for longer than 6 months, often progressing to cirrhosis. • Chronic persistent hepatitis (no cell necrosis) • Chronic active hepatitis (cell necrosis) • Steatosis-accumulation of triglycerideswithinparenchymalcells (reversible) • Fibrosis -excessdeposition of components of ECM (collagens, glycoproteins, proteoglycans) within the liver • Liver cirhosis-diffusehepaticprocesscharacterized by fibrosis and the conversion of normal liver architectureintostructurallyabnormalnodules Liver failure Insult Hepatocellular carcinoma

  10. Chronic hepatitis Etiology: Postviral Metabolic - Non-alcoholicfatty liver disease(NAFLD), Wilson'sdisease, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency. Toxic and drugs: Alcoholicliver disease Autoimmune: Autoimmunehepatitis, Primarybiliarycirrhosis, Primarysclerosingcholangitis Symptoms and signs: Nonspecificsymptoms - fatigue, anorexia, musclepains, arthralgia, weightloss

  11. Fibrosis Alteration in the normallybalancedprocesses of extracellular matrix production and degradation Stelatecells - ECM production, capillarization and constriction of sinusoidsportal hypertension Space of Disse -collagendeposition

  12. Cirhosis Finalcommonhistologicpathwayfor a wide variety of chronic liver diseases. Progressionmayoccuroverweeks to years. CIRRHOSIS Portal resistence Encephalopathy „shunting“ Portal hypertension Hepatopulmonarysy Splanchnicvasodilatation  Arterialfilling Cappilarypressure Arterial and cardiopulmonalreceptors  Vasoconstrictors  Lymphformation  Waterexcretion Na and waterretention Renalvasoconstriction Ascites Dilutionalhypernatremia Hepatorenalsy  Plasma volume

  13. Portal hypertension Increase of pressure gradient betweenportalvein and systemiccirculationabove 5 mmHg. • Patogenesis: • Higherintrahepatalvascular resistence (NO x endotelin) • Hyperkineticcirculation, splanchnicvasodilatation(NO,  TNF) • Consequences: • Collaterals „shunting“ • Ascites • Splenomegaly, hypersplenism • Varices (oesophageal, hemoroids) - bleeding • Classification: 1. Presinusoidal a) extrahepatal – thrombosis of v. portae b) intrahepatal – congenitalfibrosis, toxiclesions 2. Hepatal a) intrahepatal – cirhosis b) postsinusoidal – thrombosis of hepaticveins

  14. Encephalopathy Complex of reversibleneurologic and psychiatricssigns in chronic liver disease (damagedhepatocytes + portosystemicshunts) or in acute liver failure Manifest x latent • Pathogenesis: • - falseneurotransmiters • - GABA receptors • - Aminoacidsmetabolism • - impairment of HEB • - brain edema (vasogenic, cytotoxic) • Signs: • - malaise • - mooddisturbances • - loss of socialbariers • - inability to concentrate • - flapping tremor • - foetorhepaticus • - coma  HEB permeability GABA in synapse  amonia  benzodiazepins  act. GABAArec.  GABA-ergictransmision  inhibition of transmision encephalopathy

  15. Ascites

  16. Hepatorenalsy, Hepatopulmonarysy Hepatorenalsy (HRS) Type 1 - associated with rapid kidney failure Type 2 - associated with more gradual kidney damage Hepatopulmonarysy Triad: chronic liver disease pulmonary vasculardilatations hypoxemia

  17. Jaundice • Clinical symptom • infiltration of the skin, mucousmembranes, sclera • - increase of bilirubin plasma concentration 35 mol/l

  18. Differentialdiagnosis of hyperbilirubinemia

  19. Inheriteddisorders of bilirubin metabolism Unconjugated – deffect of conjugationto glucuronic acid Gilbert syndrome Crigler-Najjarsy type I. Crigler-Najjarsy type II. Conjugated – deffects in transport of bilirubin afterconjugation Dubin – Johnson´ssyndrome Rotor´s syndrome

  20. Prehepatic - hemolytic Icterusneonatorum (physiologicaljaundice of the newborn) 60 % fysiologicalinfants, unconjugated bilirubin to 205mo/l Pathogenesis: - overproductionof bilirubin 8-10 mg/kg - defectof transporters in hepatocytes (theirexpressionstartsafterweeks) - absence of intestinalmicroflora420-470 nm - higheractivity of –glukuronidase in mother´smilk Bilirubin encephalopathy (kernicterus) - bilirubin is potentially neurotoxic - haematoencefalic barrier is more permeable in infants - interference with a number of cellular processes – inhibition (apathy, hypotoniaortonicspasm, coma, affectionof basal ganglia – rigidity, chorea, mentalimpairment) - higher risk in prematures -presence of infections, hypoxemia, lessactivity of glucuronyltransferase, decrease of binding capacity of the albumine, acidosis, hypoglycaemia

  21. Prehepatic - hemolytic Erythroblastosisfetalis (icterusneonatorum gravis) - severe case of jaundice, - destruction of red cells as a result of immune-mediateedhemolysis – Rh-incompatibility Rh- mother (without D amtigen) – develops anti Rhaglutininswhen the fetus isRh+ (baby has inheritedRh+ antigen from the father) - incidence risesprogressivelywithsubsequentpregnancies - severe intrauterineanemia -hydrops fetalis, kernicterus, death Treatment: - preventiveadministration of anti-D globulin - replace the infantśbloodwithRh- blood

More Related