Ulcerative Colitis Flashcards

1
Q

What are the reference ranges for LFTs?

A
  • ALT < 40
  • AlkPhos 30 - 130
  • bilirubin 2 - 21
  • albumin 35 - 50
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2
Q

What would a raised ALT suggest?

A

raised ALT is a marker for heptocyte injury

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3
Q

What would a raised alkaline phosphastase suggest?

A

raised AlkPhos is a marker for bile duct injury

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4
Q

What is involved in the non-invasive liver screen?

A
  • ANCA
  • IgG / IgA / IgM
  • autoantibodies
  • often accompanied by an ultrasound scan of the liver
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5
Q

What are the 2 main types of chronic biliary diseases?

A
  1. primary biliary cholangitis (PBC)
  2. primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC)
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6
Q

What abnormal features should be looked for when looking at the histology of the liver?

A
  • portal inflammation
  • “onion skin” periductal fibrosis
  • ductopenia & fibro-obliterative scars
    • scars represent where bile ducts would have been, but have now disappeared
  • scattered areas of parenchymal inflammation
  • shikata stain - periportal copper associated protein deposition
    • ​bile salts depositied within hepatocytes that cannot escape due to bile duct injury
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7
Q

What would ductopenia look like?

A

there would be a portal tract present, but without any ducts

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8
Q
A
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9
Q

What are important things to note in terms of the histology for primary sclerosing cholangitis?

A
  • portal changes often patchy, especially in early stages
    • a “normal biopsy” does not exclude the disease
  • progression with cholestasis, fibrosis & eventually cirrhosis
  • increased risk of developing dysplasia in bile ducts (BiIN) which can progress to cholangiocarcinoma
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10
Q

What is primary sclerosing cholangitis?

What is it associated with?

A

slowly (& unpredictably) progressive chronic cholestatic liver injury with fibrosing destruction of bile ducts - either intrahepatic or extrahepatic

it is an immune mediated disorder

it has a strong association with inflammatory bowel disease (usually ulcerative colitis)

genetic susceptibility - HLA-A1-B8-DR3 haplotype

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11
Q

Who tends to be affected by primary sclerosing cholangitis?

A

it is more common in males and 70% of cases are in males

the median age of presentation is 40 years

it can affect any age, including children

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12
Q

What are the clinical features of primary sclerosing cholangitis?

A
  • the majority of patients are asymptomatic
    • routine blood tests will show LFT abnormalities
  • fluctuating pruritis
  • fatigue
  • jaundice
  • recurrent bacteria cholangitis (RUQ pain, fever & jaundice)
  • eventually features of cirrhosis & portal hypertension
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13
Q

What are the investigations and results in someone with primary sclerosing cholangitis?

A

Bloods:

  • LFTs show a mixture of hepatitic (raised ALT) & cholestatic picture (raised AlkP & bili)
  • ANCA +ve

Imaging:

  • US - exclude focal lesions e.g. cholangiocarcinoma
  • MRCP / ERCP - multiple biliary strictures & areas of dilatation

liver biopsy

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14
Q

What are the management options for PSC?

What are the management options aimed at?

A

aimed at treating symptoms and slowing disease progression

ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA):

  • bile salt analogue
  • symptom control and slow progression of disease

immunosuppression:

  • steroids, azathioprine, methotrexate

biliary balloon dilatation / stenting at ERCP

  • used if there are areas of stenosis within the larger ducts
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15
Q

What is the prognosis of PSC like?

What are the risks associated with this condition?

A
  • slowly progressive, eventually leading to cirrhosis and end stage liver failure
  • average survival 12-17 years from diagnosis (without transplant)
  • increased risk of developing cholangiocarcinoma
  • liver transplant - risk of recurrence
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