DRUGS AND THE LIVER Flashcards

1
Q

What percentage of jaundice cases are drug induced?

A

Up to 10%

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2
Q

What are the three types of liver pathology caused by drugs?

A

Acute hepatitis - 2/3 weeks after starting drug, normally resolves after cessation

Cholestasis - 4-6 weeks after starting drug. Inflammatory infiltration of bile ducts.

Necrosis - dose dependent. Toxic metabolites accumulate and liver necrosis follows. P450 inducers will often (but not always) make these individuals more susceptible to toxicity. Eg paracetamol

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3
Q

What are the drugs that can cause an acute hepatitis pattern of liver damage?

A

Antituberculous: Rifampicin, Isoniazid
Antifungal: ketoconazole
Antihypertensive: atenolol, verapamil
Anaesthetics: halothane

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4
Q

What are the drugs that can cause a cholestastic pattern of liver damage?

A
Antiarrhythmics: amiodarone
Antimetabolics: methotrexate
Allopurinol
Antipsychotics: chlorpromazine
Antibiotics: Erythromycin, clavulanic acid, flucloxacillin
Ciclosporin A
Oral contraceptive
Anabolic steroids
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5
Q

What are the drugs that can cause a necrotic pattern of liver damage?

A

Paracetamol

Carbon tetrachloride

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6
Q

What are the clinical features of drug induced cholestatic liver damage?

A

Dark urine
Jaundice
Pruritus
Steatorrhoea

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7
Q

What would the LFTs show in a drug induced acute hepatitis?

A

Raised ALT

Raised AST

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8
Q

What would the LFTs show in drug induced cholestatic liver damage?

A

Raised ALP

Raised GGT

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9
Q

What are the clinical features of paracetamol overdose?

A
Often asymptomatic for the first 24 hours
Right upper quadrant pain
Nausea
Vomiting
Bleeding
Jaundice
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10
Q

What are the risk factors for liver damage as a result of paracetamol overdose?

A

Co-ingestion of P450 inducing drugs
Chronic alcoholism
Low BMI
HIV

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11
Q

What investigations would you do in someone with suspected paracetamol overdose?

A
Paracetamol levels
Clotting screen (most sensitive marker)
LFTs
Electrolytes
ABG
Blood glucose
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12
Q

How do you treat someone with paracetamol overdose?

A

Give activated charcoal if less than one hour post ingestion
Start IV N-acetylcysteine (NAC)
Oral methionine can be given but absorption is reduced if vomiting

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13
Q

What is the most sensitive marker in terms of liver damage during paracetamol overdose?

A

Prothrombin time

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14
Q

What is the toxic metabolite in paracetamol overdose?

A

N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine

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15
Q

How is N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine inactivated in a normal liver without a paracetamol overdose?

A

Conjugated with glutathione

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16
Q

What do you do if N-acetylcysteine causes a mild anaphylactic reaction whilst you are treating a paracetamol overdose?

A

Pause infusion and then restart at slower pace with administration of anti-histamines

17
Q

What are the most important prognostic markers in someone who has taken a paracetamol overdose?

A

Prothrombin time - most sensitive. PT over 180s has 90% mortality
Creatinine more than 300 mmol/L has 70% mortality
pH below 7.3 - 85% mortality
Encephalopathy