Chapter 12 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a possible cause of liver enzyme elevation in the absence of functional and histopathological change?

A

Macroenzyme formation - large antibody-bound complexes of enzymes, slowly cleared from the circulation

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2
Q

ALT - location in cell?

A

Cytosolic

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3
Q

What is the liver enzyme of choice for hepatocellular damage?

A

ALT

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4
Q

Where is ALT found?

A

Liver
(Heart, kidney, muscle)

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5
Q

What drugs can be associated with ALT elevation?

A

Phenobarbital, doxycycline, methimazole/carbimazole, prednisolone, azathioprine, ketoconazole, sulphonamides, paracetamol

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6
Q

AST - location in cell?

A

Hepatocellular - cytosol and mitochondria

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7
Q

Where is AST found?

A

Liver, cardiac and skeletal muscle

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8
Q

What may an advantage of AST over ALT measurement?

A

Because AST is mitochondrial bound as well as in the cytoplasm, AST elevation may indicate more severe liver injury. Also shorter half life - suggests persistent liver injury

Less likely to be increased in secondary hepatopathies

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9
Q

ALKP - location in cell?

A

Microsomal and biliary canalicular membranes

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10
Q

What is the difference between ALKP in dogs and cats?

A

Cats have no steroid-induced isoenzymes

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11
Q

What ALKP isoenzymes exist?

A

Bone
(Intestine)
(Kidney)
Placenta

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12
Q

What causes ALP elevation in cholestasis?

A

Regurgitation from within hepatocytes
Solubilisation of ALKP from membranes by accumulation of bile salts
De novo synthesis

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13
Q

Where is GGT found?

A

Liver, kidney, pancreas, intestine, heart, lungs, muscle, RBCs, milk

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14
Q

In dogs, how do the sensitivities and specificities of ALKP and GGT compare?

A

GGT more specific but less sensitive

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15
Q

In cats, how do the sensitivities and specificities of ALKP and GGT compare?

A

ALKP more specific but less sensitive

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16
Q

What SPE changes would be expected in severe liver disease?

A

Reduction in all except gamma globulins (not produced in liver)
Albumin most affected

17
Q

What is the half life of albumin in dogs?

18
Q

How is bilirubin produced and processed?

19
Q

What is deltabilirubin?

A

Biliprotein - bilirubin covalently bound to albumin
Turnover same speed as albumin

20
Q

How can abdominal fluid analysis determine the cause of ascites in liver disease?

A

Transudate - hypoalbuminaemia or pre hepatic portal hypertension
Modified transudate - hepatic or pre hepatic portal hypertension (hepatic sinusoids highly permeable - hepatic lymph contains 80% serum proteins)

21
Q

What are bile acids formed from?

A

Cholesterol and taurine

22
Q

Where are bile acids absorbed?

23
Q

Describe bile acid processing

24
Q

How high can secondary hepatopathies increase SBA by?

A

Often up to 50, occasionally up to 100

25
What could cause elevated ammonia and normal BAST?
Abnormal urea cycle Cobalamin deficiency
26
What is the reported sensitivity and specificity for PSS diagnosis of a) BAST and b) ammonia?
a) D - 93/67% C - 100/71% b) D - 85/86% C - 83/76%