Liver Failure Flashcards

1
Q

liver failure acute or chronic

A

both: acute (reversible) or chronic (irreversible)

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2
Q

etiology

A
  • cirrhosis
  • hepatitic C
  • fulminant hepatitis (acute, very severe)
  • toxic liver damage (ex. alcohol)
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3
Q

how is hematology affected

A
  • defective hemostasis
  • dec hematopoiesis
  • GI bleeds occur
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4
Q

how are clotting factors impacted

A
  • dec synthesis of clotting factors & fibrinogen

- inadequate clearance of clotting factors so clotting factors remain active –> DIC

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5
Q

how is hematopoiesis impacted

A
  • dec hematopoiesis –> deficiency of blood cells
  • causes anemia d/t dec RBC prod + prod of dysfx RBCs w/ membranes that are susceptible to lysing
  • thrombocytopenia (risk of bleeding) + leukopenia (immunocompromised pt)
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6
Q

how do GI bleeds occur

A
  • portal HTN causes blood to back up into GIT –> varices that can rupture
  • d/t impaired clotting factor synthesis, clotting can’t be initiated so a GI bleed results
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7
Q

how is metabolism affected

A
  • inadequate bilirubin clearance
  • hypoalbuminemia
  • defective urea cycle
  • dec estrogen catabolism
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8
Q

why does inadequate bilirubin clearance occur

A
  • bilirubin is combined w/ glucoronic acid in the liver to be converted into a form that is soluble in water
  • if this ^ fx dec, then bilirubin cannot be broken down and excreted –> jaundice (excess bilirubin)
  • ALSO, excess RBC lysing results in further bilirubin buildup
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9
Q

why does hypoalbuminemia (low levels of albumin in blood) occur

A

dec OP –> fluid shifts out of vessels –> edema & ascites

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10
Q

why does defective urea cycle occur

A
  • breakdown of proteins results in production of ammonia (toxic)
  • liver converts ammonia into less toxic form (urea) which is then excreted
  • w/ dec liver fx, there is a builup of ammonia causing inc toxicity –> hyperammonemia
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11
Q

how is dec estrogen catabolism impacted

A
  • liver fx to breakdown estrogen impaired resulting in hyperestrogenism
  • results in males & females having: inc estrogen –> infertility + l/o libido; males: atrophy of tests, impotence; females: menstruation issues, sterility
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12
Q

what does hepatorenal syndrome consist of

A
  • idiopathic renal failure
  • severe renal ischemia
  • oliguria
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13
Q

how does severe renal ischemia occur

A

portal HTN results in inc of blood in portal system, therefore, less blood is circulating to kidneys –> ischemia

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14
Q

oliguria

A

small amounts of urine + azotemia (inc nitrogen-containing compounds + wastes, such as creatinine in blood)

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15
Q

hepatic encephalopathy

A
  • CNS mnfts of liver failure
  • dec detoxifying capabilities of liver w/ failure
  • blood bypasses liver through alternative channels via portosystemic shunts
  • toxic compounds remain in circulation and travel to brain leading to hepatic encephalopathy
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16
Q

mnfts of hepatic encephalopahy

A

early mnfts:

  • asterixis (palm flapping –> hand tremor when wrist bent back)
  • hyperreflexia (exaggerated reflexes found upon Px, such as tendon reflex)
  • confusion, coma and death r/t CNS failure
17
Q

tx

A
  • treat underlying cause
  • symptomatic management
  • treat cmplx (ex. varices, ascites, portal HTN)
  • non-absorbable Abx (Abx act on normal flora in bowel to minimize amount of ammonia produced)
  • purgative (laxative to eliminate protein in gut so ammonia isn’t produced)
  • liver transplant