Acute hepatitis Flashcards
What is the definition of acute hepatitis?
Sudden onset of liver inflammation, normally due to viral infection lasting less than 6 months
What is the epidemiology of Hep A-C and E?
- Hep A most common
- Hep B - carriage rate of 0.1-0.5% → Hep D
- Hep C – 240 million people worldwide affected
- Hep E – Mortality of severe hepatic failure 1-2%
What is the pathology of acute hepatitis (including Hep A-C and E specifically)?
- Non-specific changes – dependent on cause and individual
- Hepatocytes swell, granulose and vacuole
- Hepatocytes can undergo necrosis and shrink (spotty/focal to massive)
- Bridging between central veins and portal tracts
- Inflammation infiltrated by lymphocytes
- Fatty changes may also occur
- Hep A – replicates in liver, excreted in bile and then faeces 2 weeks before symptoms and up to 7 days after. Spread by faeco-oral route of contaminated food/water.
- Hep B – vertical transmission from mother to child, IV spread through blood, through abrasions on contaminated objects. Semen and saliva spread also possible.
- Hep C – spread by blood, limited sexual transmission.
- Hep E – transmitted by contaminated water or dogs/pigs/rodents
What are the risk factors/aetiology of acute hepatitis?
- Infections (Hep A-E, toxoplasma gondii, cytomegalovirus, EBV, yellow fever)
- Paracetamol, ketoconazole, nitrofurantoin, Isoniazid (TB treatment), Methylodopa (hypertension treatment)
- Alcohol
- Poison (Aflatoxin)
- Pregnancy
- Wilsons disease
- Circulatory insufficiency
What are the signs/symptoms of acute hepatitis?
- Non specific – feeling ‘unwell’
- Nausea/vomiting
- Anorexia
- Jaundice
- Dark urine
- Pale stools
- Palpable liver – spleen may also be palpable
- Lymphadonopathy
- Rashes
- Mental confusion
What other diseases does acute hepatitis present similarly to?
- Other forms of hepatitis
- Cholecystitis
- Cholangitis
- Pancreatitis
What investigations are carried out when acute hepatitis is suspected?
- LFT’s – bilirubinuria ↑, ↑ AST/ALT
- Urinary urobilinogen ↑
- WBC ↓ and ↑ lymphocytes
- Anaemia
- ESR ↑
- Anti-HAV IgM ↑
What are the surgical treatments for acute hepatitis?
Liver transplant
What are the pharmacological treatments for acute hepatitis?
- Formaldehye-inactive HAV vaccination (prevention)
- Human immunoglobulin
- Entercavir/tenofovir
- Hep C: interferon
- Fluids
What are the non pharmacological treatments for acute hepatitis?
- Rehydration
- Rest – avoid physical exertion until symptoms have improved
- Hand hygiene