role of clinical biochemistry in liver disease Flashcards

1
Q

what are the transanimase enzymes

A

ALT and AST

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2
Q

transanimase activities in human tissues

A

AST highest in heart and liver, lowest in serum and RBCs
ALT highest in lover and lowest in lungs, RBCs and Serum
both med in kidney, muscle, pancreas

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3
Q

factors influencing serum transanimase finding

A

based on 3 factors
extent of damage to tissue releasing them
amount of each transanimase in that tissue
rate of clear eve of enzyme from circulation
ALT half life is 47h and AST 17h
complication - hepatic gets have two forms of AST, cytosol and mt

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4
Q

how does ALT vary with BMI

A

mean ALT inc with inc BMI

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5
Q

consideration for interpreting transanimases

A

biological variables - diurnal, dietary factors eg coffee, race (higher if african or hispanic), weight
ref range selection - pop exclusion criteria (more rigorous, lower the ref range, skewed fist curve)
drugs - prescribed and OTC

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6
Q

distribution of transanimase curve

A

tails off to higher end

not even

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7
Q

what is ALP

A

alkaline phosphatase
catalysed the hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters
membrane bound, liver and bone
found in cells next to canalculi
unregulated in response to bile duct obstruction and infiltrative/space occupying lesions in liver

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8
Q

what is GGT

A
mainly found in hepatobiliary system 
inc in blood conc due to inc synthesis 
by alcohol/ drugs (anti convulsants) 
billary obstruction
liver tumours 
small inc with hepatitis
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9
Q

tissues containing ALP and GGT

A

ALP
hepatocytes, billary tract, bone, kidney, intestinal mucosa, pancreas, placenta
GGT
hepatocytes, billary tract, kidney, pancreas

can both be induced by drugs/alcohol
some tumours have placental ALP
ALP isozyme pattern sometimes req

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10
Q

protein synthesis routine tests for liver

A

serum albumin conc
prothrombin time - INR

removal of potentially toxic substances - drugs and bilirubin

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11
Q

production of bilirubin from haem

A

80% of bilirubin from RBCs taken up by RE system for degradation
haem oxygenate release iron from haem molecule to form biliverdin reductase
tightly bound to albumin

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12
Q

where does bilirubin go

A

unconjugated bilirubin + albumin in blood
to liver, conjugated to glucuronic acid
to conjugated bilirubin to biliary sytem
bacterial proteases form urobillogen to faeces in SI
Or via kidneys

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13
Q

how can bilirubin levels be measured

A

total - conjugated and unconjugated
conjugated- 40%, water soluble, excreted in bile, is raised dark urine
unconjugated - not water soluble, bound to albumin so doesn’t appear in urine

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14
Q

how does liver disease present

A

jaundice - with or with our itching
pain - constant or colicky
non specific - nausea, fatigue, weight loss
incidental
detected at serum bilirubin conc of 50 umol/l, obvious at 100

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15
Q

diagnoses of liver disease

A

clinical presentation
pattern of routine liver tests
more specific tests, inc diagnostic radiology

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16
Q

causes of extrahepatic jaundice

A

gallstones - common
malignancy - bile duct, pancreas
pancreatitis

17
Q

causes of intrahepatic jaundice

A

hepatocellular disease
drug induced cholestasis
cholangitis
cirrhosis

18
Q

how does alcohol affect AST and ALT

A

serum transanimases less marked
ratio freq >2
chronic alcohol excess mt AST is elevated

19
Q

markers of liver fibrosis

A

FIB-4 - monitor progression
NFS
Enhanced Liver Function Test (ELF) - 3 serum markers

20
Q

causes of hepatocellular disease

A

viral hepatitis
parasitic - malaria
bacterial
metabolic - alcohol/drugs/NAFLD
AI - primary biliary/sclerosing cholangitis
genetic - A1AT deficiency, haemochromatosis, Wilson’s disease

21
Q

investigation of persistently elevated ALT

A
LFTs inc GGT/AST
Total protein/albumin/Ig
Glucose and lipids
AI
FBC
Iron studies 
viral studies 
carb def transferin 
coeliac 
drugs
22
Q

NAFLD risk factors

A

present when >5% hepatocytes steatotic in patents consuming excess alcohol
rf
age, male, ethnic (hispanic), diet, sleep apnoea, genetic

23
Q

how does NAFLD progress

A

90% simple steatosis - reversible and relatively benign
10-30% progress to NASH
25-40% to fibrosis - cirrhosis

24
Q

is incidental finding of abnormal LFTs normal

A

yes
5% pop
transient, obesity, medication, NAFLD, ARLD, Hep, AI, haemochromatitis

25
Q

how does haemolytic anaemia present on a blood film

A

vary shape and size
colour density
spherical, not biconcave
misshapen

26
Q

what is DAT (Coombs test)

A

RBCs with IgG/C3 incubated together with antibodies

agglutination is positive test