ASCITES Flashcards

1
Q

Overview (4)

A
  • Presence of fluid in the peritoneal cavity
  • Cirrhosis is commonest cause
  • Cirrhosis —> peripheral arterial vasodilatation —> reduction in effective blood volume, activation of the sympathetic nervous system and RAAS —> renal salt and water retention (also encouraged by hypoalbuminemia)
  • Mainly localized to the peritoneal cavity as a result of the portal hypertension
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2
Q

Clinical Features (4)

A
  • Fullness in the flanks with shifting dullness and fluid thrill
  • Tense ascites is uncomfortable and produces respiratory distress
  • Pleural effusion (usually right-sided) and peripheral edema may also be present
  • Meigs syndrome: triad of benign ovarian fibroma, ascites, and pleural effusion
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3
Q

Investigations (6)

A

Ascitic fluid diagnostic aspiration: 10-20mL of ascitic fluid tested for:
- Albumin: for measurement of SAAG* (serum albumin - ascites albumin)
- Total protein**
- Neutrophil count: if >250 cells/mm3 —> spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Gram stain and culture for bacteria and acid-fast bacilli
- Cytology for malignant cells
- Amylase to exclude pancreatic ascites

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4
Q

Serum albumin - ascitic albumin (SAAG) ratio

A

Differentiates between different causes of ascites (Transudate vs Exudate). A high gradient (SAAG > 11.1g/L) indicates portal hypertension and suggests a non-peritoneal cause of ascites

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5
Q

SAAG < 11.1 g/L (Exudate) (5)

A
  • Peritoneal carcinomatosis
  • Peritoneal tuberculosis
  • Pancreatitis
  • Nephrotic syndrome
  • Lymphatic obstruction (chylous)
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6
Q

SAAG > 11.1 g/L (Transudate) (3)

A
  • Portal hypertension (cirrhosis)
  • Heart failure
  • Hepatic outflow obstruction (Budd-chiari syndrome, venocclusive disease)
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7
Q

Ascitic fluid total protein

A

May be used to differentiate causes of ascites, esp. if ascitic albumin or serum albumin is not known

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8
Q

Ascitic T. Protein < 25

A
  • Portal hypertension (cirrhosis)
  • Nephrotic syndrome
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9
Q

Ascitic T. Protein > 25

A

Heart failure

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10
Q

Ascites from cirrhosis

A

SAAG > 11.1g/L and Ascitic T. Protein < 25

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11
Q

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) (5)

A
  • Occurs in 8% of cirrhotic patients with ascites and has a mortality rate of 10-15%
  • Most common infecting organism is E.coli
  • Suspect diagnosis in any patient with cirrhotic ascites who deteriorates
  • Empirical antibiotic therapy with a third-generation cephalosporin (IV cefotaxime) is started if the ascitic fluid neutrophil count is >= 250 cells/mm3
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis with oral norfloxacin is indicated in after one episode or in patients at high risk (ascites protein <10 g/dL or severe liver disease)
  • SBP is also an indication for referral to a liver transplant center
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12
Q

Management of ascites due to portal hypertension/cirrhosis (4)

A

1- Stepwise diuretic approach:
- Dietary sodium restriction 40 mmol/day and oral spironolactone daily
- Furosemide daily is added if response is poor
- Aim of treatment: to lose about 0.5kg of body weight each day
- Too rapid diuresis causes intravascular volume depletion and hypokalemia which can precipitate encephalopathy
- A rising creatinine level or hyponatremia indicates inadequate renal perfusion and the need for temporary cessation of diuretic therapy
2- Paracentesis:
- In those with tense ascites or resistant to standard medical therapy
- Removed over several hours providing rapid symptom relief
- IV infusion of albumin administered immediately after paracentesis increases the circulating volume and prevents re-accumulation
3- TIPS is occasionally used for resistant/refractory ascites
4- Note: both diuretics and TIPS predispose to encephalopathy

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