Symp 3 - Alcohol – Enemy of the Common Man Flashcards

1
Q

what is alcohol related liver disease?

A

Alcohol-related liver disease is where your liver is damaged by drinking too much alcohol

Alcohol-related liver disease (ARLD) refers to liver damage caused by excess alcohol intake. There are several stages of severity and a range of associated symptoms

ARLD does not usually cause any symptoms until the liver has been severely damaged

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2
Q

what is the epidemiology of alcohol rleated hospital admissions?

A
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3
Q

what is the Safe Limit of Alcohol?

A

There is no safe amount of Alcohol

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4
Q

alcohol consumption can affect the whole body but:

what damage can be caused to the live due to alcohol abuse over long periods of time?

A

can cause acute alcoholic hepatitis which is a very serious condition

if at the stage of hepatic steatosis or alcoholic hepatitis then abstinence at this stage can help them

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5
Q

which is healtyh liver, which is fatty liver and which is cirrhosis?

A

Fatty liver - White globules of fat – happen hen drink excessive alcohol over a period of time

Chicken wire meshing around the portal track

CIrrhosis liver - Nodule formation, fibrosis and cirrhosis in the bottom picture

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6
Q

what is shown here?

A

Normal liver

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7
Q

Alcoholic fatty liver:

  • Most Heavy drinkers will have _____ Liver (more than 10 units a day for 7 days)
  • __% progress to cirrhosis
  • Alcohol __________ improves Fatty Liver to normal
A

Fatty

20

Abstinence

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8
Q

what causes Acute Alcoholic Hepatitis?

A

•Alcohol intake > 6u / day

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9
Q

how does someone present with Acute Alcoholic Hepatitis?

A
  • Jaundice with Bilirubin > 80mg/dl
  • No other aetiology for Liver inflammation
  • Very high Mortality / No specific treatment yet

Very serious condition

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10
Q

what do we use to measure alcoholic hepatitis?

A

Alcoholic Hepatitis GAHS score (Glasgow alcoholic hepatic score but there is any others but this is the one that we use)

GAHS ≥ 9:

•30 day mortality

  • Without steroids 48%
  • With steroids 22%

•84 day mortality:

  • Without steroids - 62%
  • With steroids - 41%
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11
Q

what is the epidemiology of ARLD & Hospital admission?

A
  • 1 person admitted with ARLD / day
  • Age at presentation is going down
  • Mean length of stay is 9 days
  • 1 death every 4.5 days at ARI
  • Mean age at dying 58
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12
Q

Alcohol & Malnutrition - how common is it and how is it caused?

A
  • 60 % of chronic abusers have malnutrition
  • Most of the calories is from Alcohol
  • Total energy intake is reduced:
  • Nausea & Vomiting
  • Abdo pain
  • Diarrhoea

Alcohol is fermentation carbohydrate and this needs a lot of vitamins to absorb so all your body vitamins are used

Most patients are sarcopenic (muscles loss)

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13
Q

what is the Mortality in Alcoholic Cirrhosis?

A
  • 75% die of Liver decompensation
  • 20-25% Hepatocellular cancer sequelae
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14
Q

what is the most common indication for liver trnasplant an dhow does it help?

A
  • <50 % 2 year survival without Transplant
  • ARLD is the most common indication:
  • Resistant complications of Cirrhosis
  • Jaundice
  • Ascites

•- ncephalopathy

  • Coagulopathy

Hepatocellular Cancer (reduced incidence in these patients)

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15
Q

Alcohol and Teenagers - what is seen in teenagers?

A
  • Cirrhosis is rare in Teenagers (secondary to alcohol)
  • Deranged LFTs are common especially in Obese teenagers
  • Exposure to Alcohol <14 yrs - Strongly associated with later alcohol abuse & dependence, (RR 2.3-4.0)
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16
Q

healthy liver = fatty liver then prolonged alcoho consumption = ……..

A

cirrhosis of the liver

17
Q

Case:

36 Female

  • Referred to GI clinic with Deranged LFTs (Went to GP for unrelated symptoms back pain)
  • Tried several time to book an appointment and eventually succeeded
  • 3 children 18, 8 & 3
  • Husband offshore worker
  • Obese
  • No friends
  • Smokes 10/ day
  • Alcohol 2 bottles of wine/ night

Raised MCV, low urea, ALT and AST ratio reversed = someone drinking alcohol or dependant on alcohol

INR/prothrombin time is normal so is good

A

Ultrasound scan:

  • Enlarged Fatty Liver
  • Gall Bladder Normal
  • Portal venous flow normal direction, no thrombus
  • Spleen size normal (normal spleen means no portla hypertension)
  • No ascites

Chronic liver screen:

  • Hepatitis serology : Negative
  • Autoantibody profile Negative
  • Coeliac serology Negative
  • Immunoglobulins: Normal
  • Lipids : normal
  • Caeruloplasmin: Normal
  • A1AT: Normal

Large globules of fat in the hepatocytes in histology

This is a reversible condition

When engage in services there is a good prognosis

(Dec 2020) 36F:

  • Now referred to ophthalmology with reduced vision
  • Toxic Neuropathy: Alcohol/Nicotine
  • ? Nutritional
  • Need to check Vit B12, Folate & Ferritin.
18
Q

Case 2:

75 male retired surgeon

  • Left sided abdo pain
  • Dark urine
  • Swollen legs
  • Evasive about Alcohol intake
  • Says he had Glandular Fever / Lymes disease

Blood tests very deranged

MCV high

This man has increased INR

Albumin is low

Liver is failing compared to previous patient

A

Ultrasound scan:

  • Multiple hypoechoic lesions within the Liver ? Metastases
  • 10cm mass between spleen / left Kidney

CT scan triple phase Liver:

  • Features of Liver cirrhosis with Nodularity
  • Multiple lesions both lobes of liver
  • Portal venous thrombus
  • Mass between Spleen/ L Kidney
  • Ascites
  • Bony Metastases to Sternum/ 10th Rib
  • Autoantibody Negative
  • Hepatitis Serology Negative

•Alpha Feto Protein 61724

  • Metastatic Hepatocellular cancer
  • Patient died 6 weeks after clinic visit.
19
Q

Case 3:

40 M

  • Oil worker, travels a lot, high pressure job
  • Presented with Haematemesis & Malena
  • Long history of Alcohol intake / anxiety relief
  • o/e spider naevi, Psoriasis, Hepatomegaly
  • Endoscopy: Fresh Blood in stomach
  • Unable to control bleeding
  • Sengstaken tube inserted / ICU
  • Transferred to Liver unit for TIPSS insertion
  • Now remains abstinent past 2 months, LFTs improving
A

By doing TIPS we have controlled high bleeding

No alcohol and LFTs improving

20
Q

Summary:

  • No amount of alcohol is ____
  • Early stages of ARLD are _______
  • High ________ with AAH & Decompensation
  • __________ approach vital in management
  • Long term survival related to _______
  • Liver ___________ improves QOL / survival
A

safe

reversible

mortality

Multidisciplinary

abstinence

Transplantation