Functional Liver Tests and Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis Flashcards
What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)?
Location: Cytosol and mitochondria of hepatocytes Heart Skeletal Muscle Blood
Clinical Implications:
Hepatocellular damage
May result from non-hepatic injury as well
What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)?
Location:
Cytosol of all hepatocytes
Clinical Implications:
Hepatocellular damage
What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of bilirubin?
Location:
Heme degradation product conjugated in ER of hepatocytes, excreted in bile
Clinical Implications:
Cholestasis, impaired conjugation, biliary obstruction
Elevated indirect bilirubin = hemolysis
Elevated direct bilirubin = bile duct obstruction
What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Alkaline Phosphatase?
Location:
Bile canaliculi microvilli
Serum Alk Phos is primarily from liver and bone
Clinical Implications: Cholestasis, infiltrative disease, biliary obstruction Non-Hepatic implications: Bone disease Pregnancy
What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Albumin?
Location:
Synthesized in liver
Clinical Implications:
Synthetic Dysfunction
What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Prothrombin time?
Location:
Many blood coagulation factors are synthesized in the liver
Clinical Implications:
Synthetic dysfunction
What is the normal ratio of AST:ALT, what do common abnormalities indicate, and what levels signify a mild vs severe abnormality?
Normal ratio AST:ALT = 0.8
Ratio >1 is seen in cirrhosis
Ratio >2 suggests alcoholic liver disease
- Low ALT from B6 malabsorption
- High AST from alcohol preferentially damaging AST rich mitochondria
Normal levels of each ~50 Units/L
Mild elevation of AST or ALT = 15 times normal levels
Describe the etiology of jaundice
Jaundice is the result of elevated bilirubin. Bilirubin is a normal heme degradation product. It is normally taken up into hepatocytes and conjugated (glucoronidation) by the enzyme bilirubin-UGT in the ER to a water soluble form that is excreted into the bile canaliculi. Elevations in bilirubin may manifest as either conjugated (direct) hyperbilirubinemia or unconjugated (indirect) hyperbilirubinemia.
Name and describe three causes of unconjugated (indirect) hyperbilirubinemia
Gilbert’s Syndrome: benign disease resulting from decreased expression of bilirubin-UGT. Patients have normal AST, ALT, and Alk Phos levels. Jaundice results from stress, and may be protective.
Crippler-Najjar syndrome: A more severe disease than Gilbert’s resulting from mutation (Type II) or complete absence (Type I) of UGT. Type I = neurologic impairment
Hemolysis: Increased heme breakdown (i.e. Hemolytic anemia)
Name and describe four causes of conjugated (direct) hyperbilirubinemia
Extra hepatic obstruction of bile flow
Intrahepatic cholestasis: a functional impairment of bile formation within the hepatocyte
Hepatitis
Cirrhosis
What are the four main patterns of disease that liver tests can detect?
Hepatocellular injury or necrosis
Cholestatic disease
Infiltrative disease
Synthetic Dysfunction
What are the hepatic and non-hepatic etiologies associated with mildly elevated AST or ALT?
Hepatic: Chronic HBV and HCV Acute Viral hepatitis (including EBV and CMV) Steatohepatitis Alcohol -related liver injury Hemochromatosis Autoimmune Hepatitis a-1-antitrypsin deficiency Wilson's disease Celiac disease Cirrhosis
Non-hepatic: Hemolysis Myopathy Thyroid disease Strenuous exercise
What are the etiologies associated with severely elevated AST or ALT?
Acute viral hepatitis (Hep A-E, herpes) Medications/toxins Ischemic hepatitis Autoimmune hepatitis Wilson's disease Acute Budd-Chiari syndrome Hepatic artery ligation or thrombosis
What are the etiologies associated with elevated alkaline phosphatase?
HEPATOBILIARY: Bile duct obstruction Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC) Medications Hepatitis Cirrhosis Infiltrating Disease of liver
NON-HEPATIC: Bone disease Pregnancy Chronic renal failure Lymphoma/other malignancies Congestive heart failure Infection and inflammation
What are some infiltrating diseases of the liver that cause elevated Alk Phos levels?
Sarcoidosis Tuberculosis Fungal Infection Other granulomatous diseases Amyloidosis Lymphoma Metastatic malignancy Hepatocellular carcinoma