Gastro - Viva - Acute Liver Failure / Paracetamol Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of acute liver failure

A

New liver injury <26 weeks old

Impaired synthetic function (INR>1.5)

Triad of jaundice, encephalopathy and coagulopathy

Progresses to MOF / Death in half of cases

Classified by the O Grady system

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2
Q

Describe the O Grady System

A

Categorises ALF on the basis of interval between onset of jaundice to the development of encephalopathy

Hyper acute <1week
Acute 1-4 weeks
Subacute 4-12 weeks

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3
Q

Causes of ALF

A

Infection - Hepatitis’ A-E, HSV, CMV, VZV, EBV

Drugs - Paracetamol, epileptics (phenytoin), TB (isoniazid), Chemo, St Johns Wort, recreational (ecstasy, amphetamines)

Pregnancy- HELLP, fatty liver

Malignancy - primary or secondary

Vascular - budd chiari - hep vein thrombosis,

Ischaemic hep -

Toxins - mushrooms

Autoimmune,

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4
Q

Describe the Kings college criteria for paracetamol overdose

A

PH<7.30

OR

All 3 of INR>6.5 (PT>100)
Creatinine > 300
Grade 3 or 4 encephalopathy

Changes in lactate >3 after resus

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5
Q

Kings College criteria for non-paracetamol ALF

A

INR > 6.5 (PT>100 secs)

OR

Any three of:
Age<11 or >40
Aetiology is non A, non B hep.
Time from jaundice to encephalopathy > 7 days (eg not hyper acute)
INR>3.5 (PT>50 sec)
Serum Bilirubin >300 umol
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6
Q

How does ALF present

A

Malaise, nausea, jaundice
Encephalopathy develops over time

High cardiac output, with reduced SVR (differential for sepsis)

Liver necrosis -> inflammatory cascade, vasoplegic collapse, AKI, cerebral oedema

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7
Q

Grading of Encephalopathy

A

West Haven Criteria

Grade 4 - coma unresponsive to stimuli
Grade 3 - Somnolence, semi-stupour, confusion, remains to verbal stimulation
Grade 2 - Lethargy, apathy, disorientated in time, persona change, inappropriate
Grade 1 - Trivial lack of awareness, anxiety, short attention span, impaired addition

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8
Q

What happens in the later stages of encephalopathy

A

Elevated ICP

Due to cerebral oedema (present in 80% of grade 4)
25% die

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9
Q

How does renal failure happen in ALF

A

1 - Acute tubular necrosis —> hypovolaemia, hypotension, perfusion
—> nephrotoxins eg paracetamol

2 - Underlying disease process - glomerular nephritis in Hep B/C

3 - Intra abdomnial hypertension from ascites

4 - Hepatorenal syndrome

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10
Q

ICU management of ALF - respiratory

A

Grade III, IV encephalopathy —I&V.

Excessive PEEP with increase hepatic venous pressure and ICP

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11
Q

ICU management cardiovascular

A

Reduced SVR with high CO.
Hepatic hypoperfusion.

Needs fluid resus, taking care not to overload and worsen cerebral oedema.

Vasopressin to maintain MAP 60-65, CPP60-80

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12
Q

ICU management - Neuro

A
Elevate head to improve CPP
Sedate
MAP 75, CPP 60-80
Avoid hypoxia and hypercapnoea
Sugars 4-10
Avoid fever

Mannitol, hypertonic saline for ICP

?therapeutic hypothermia, barbiturates, indamethacin

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13
Q

ICU management - renal and coag

A

Renal - RRT when there is fluid overload, acidosis or worsenign failure

Coag - Liver makes all factors except VIII.
Abnormal synthesis and antithrombin III deficiency —> coagulaopathy and DIC

Product replacement in active bleeding. But leave alone otherwise as PT is marker of severity/prognostic marker.

Liver transplant is only effective tx when high likelihood of death.

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14
Q

Mechanism of paracetamol overdose

A

N-acetyl p benzoquinone (NAPQI) is responsible for the hepatotoxicity.

Normal - paracetamol is metabolised by glucoronidiation and sulphation.

Small amount metabolised by cP450 system into NAPQI.

In overdose - glucoronidation and sulphation is saturated, cp450 takes over.
More NAPQI made

Glutathoine stores deplete

NAPQI causes widespread hepatocyte damage —> acute hepatic necrosis.

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15
Q

Treatment of paracetamol toxicity

A

N-acetylcysteine, (NAC)

Glutathione precursor, replenishes hepatic stores

Effective within 8 hours, but also improves prognosis after 8 hours

Treat when above the nomogragm

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16
Q

What is fulminant failure?

A

If hepatic encephalopathy appears within 8 weeks of the onset of jaundice

17
Q

Epidemiology - is it male or female mainly?

A

70% female

18
Q

Median age of presentation of ALF

A

38

19
Q

causes of ALF

A

Developing world is viral

Developed - drug induced –> paracetamol

Half of all paracetamolg ODs are unintentional

20
Q

The VITAMIN mnemonic

A
Vascular - ischaemia, Bull Chiari
Infective - Hep A-E, CMV, HSV
Trauma - Laceration
Autoimmune - though more likely chronic
Metabolic - Wilsons
Iatrogenic 
Neoplastic
21
Q

Features of ALF by system?

A
CVS - hypotension, hypovolaemia
Ascites in 30%
Resp - failure --> ARDS
Renal - AKI --> hypoperfusion (ATN), drug toxicity
Neuro - enceph ,confusion etc
Haem - Thrombocytopenia, haemolysis anaemia
Metabolic - high ammonia, hypoglycaemia
Immune - SIRS in 50%
22
Q

Treatment of pregnancy induced fatty liver

A

Deliver the baby