Functional Liver Tests and Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)?

A
Location: 
Cytosol and mitochondria of hepatocytes
Heart
Skeletal Muscle
Blood

Clinical Implications:
Hepatocellular damage
May result from non-hepatic injury as well

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2
Q

What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)?

A

Location:
Cytosol of all hepatocytes

Clinical Implications:
Hepatocellular damage

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3
Q

What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of bilirubin?

A

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

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4
Q

What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Alkaline Phosphatase?

A

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
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5
Q

What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Albumin?

A

Location:
Synthesized in liver

Clinical Implications:
Synthetic Dysfunction

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6
Q

What is the common location and clinical implications of abnormal levels of Prothrombin time?

A

Location:
Many blood coagulation factors are synthesized in the liver

Clinical Implications:
Synthetic dysfunction

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7
Q

What is the normal ratio of AST:ALT, what do common abnormalities indicate, and what levels signify a mild vs severe abnormality?

A

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

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8
Q

Describe the etiology of jaundice

A

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.

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9
Q

Name and describe three causes of unconjugated (indirect) hyperbilirubinemia

A

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)

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10
Q

Name and describe four causes of conjugated (direct) hyperbilirubinemia

A

Extra hepatic obstruction of bile flow

Intrahepatic cholestasis: a functional impairment of bile formation within the hepatocyte

Hepatitis

Cirrhosis

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11
Q

What are the four main patterns of disease that liver tests can detect?

A

Hepatocellular injury or necrosis
Cholestatic disease
Infiltrative disease
Synthetic Dysfunction

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12
Q

What are the hepatic and non-hepatic etiologies associated with mildly elevated AST or ALT?

A
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
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13
Q

What are the etiologies associated with severely elevated AST or ALT?

A
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
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14
Q

What are the etiologies associated with elevated alkaline phosphatase?

A
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
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15
Q

What are some infiltrating diseases of the liver that cause elevated Alk Phos levels?

A
Sarcoidosis
Tuberculosis
Fungal Infection
Other granulomatous diseases
Amyloidosis
Lymphoma
Metastatic malignancy
Hepatocellular carcinoma
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16
Q

What are all of the HBV serological markers and what do they indicate?

A

HBsAg = Hepatitis B surface antigen
Pos indicates active HBV infection

HBeAg = Hepatitis B envelope antigen
Pos indicates a high viral load

HBsAb = Hepatitis B surface antibody
Pos Indicates prior exposure, either infection or immunization

HBcAb = Hepatitis B core antibody
Pos Indicates prior infection only

HBeAb = Hepatitis B envelope antibody
Pos indicates low viral load

HBV DNA
Pos indicates active viral replication

17
Q

What is the goal of HBV treatment?

A

Seroconversion
Loss of HBeAg and development of HBeAb associated with negative HBV DNA when treatment is stopped

Prevention of decompensated cirrhosis in those with advanced fibrosis

Note: loss of HBsAg rarely occurs (infection is still present, but not in high quantities

18
Q

What are the treatment options for HBV?

A

Interferon therapy:

Finite duration of therapy

19
Q

What is the goal of HCV treatment?

A

Chronic HCV infection is defined as HCV RNA presence >6mo after infection

Goal of antiviral therapy is to clear HCV RNA such that patients remain HCV RNA clear 12 weeks after stopping therapy.
Sustained virological response = cure

20
Q

What is the treatment for Hereditary Hemochromatosis?

A

HH - Inherited disorder resulting in increased iron absorption in duodenum, accumulating in liver
Therapeutic phlebotomy or chelation therapy with desfuroxamine

21
Q

What is the treatment for autoimmune hepatitis?

A

AH - Chronic hepatitis characterized by immunologic and autoimmune features.
Treatment is based on immune suppression:
Corticosteroids
Azathioprine
Relapse typically occurs if treatment is stopped after liver enzymes normalize

22
Q

What is the treatment for Primary Biliary Cirrhosis?

A

PBC - Immune mediated disease causing damage to small intrahepatic bile ducts.
Treatment is ursodeoxycolic acid (UDCA):
A secondary bile acid produced by intestinal bacteria
Improves bile acid transport, detoxifies bile, provides cytoprotection

23
Q

What is the treatment for Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis?

A

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