WEEK 15 - Jaundice Flashcards
What is the route of transmission for each hepatitis? Is it acute or chronic?
Hep A = faecal-oral, acute
Hep B = blood and bodily fluids, acute and chronic
Hep C = blood and bodily fluids, acute and chronic
Hep D = blood and bodily fluids, acute and chronic (can only be infected if patient also infected with hep B)
Hep E = faecal-oral, chronic (rare and usually associated with immunosuppression)
What are 4 essential functions functions of the liver?
- Destroys or detoxifies harmful endogenous and exogenous substances (eg. Cellular debris, bacteria, drugs)
- Metabolism of carbs, fats and proteins
- Produces clotting factors for the clotting cascade
- Stores excess glucose as glycogen
What are the 3 most common causes of liver cirrhosis in the western world?
- non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
- alcohol-related liver disease
- chronic viral hepatitis
What is the first serological marker to become positive in a new, acute Hepatitis B infection? Detected on average 4 weeks after exposure to the virus. Usually becomes undetectable after 4-6 months. Detection after 6 months implies chronic hepatitis B infection.
HBsAg
The presence of what following acute infection with HBV suggests complete resolution of infection, and is also detectable in those immunised against hep B?
HBsAb or anti-HBs
What is present in new acute infection and associated with high Hepatitis B virus DNA levels (HBV DNA)?
HBeAg
Patients with high levels of what are more infectious in HBV?
Hepatitis B DNA
What appears within weeks of acute infection and remains detectable for 4-8 months?
Hepatitis B core antibody IgM (anti-HBc IgM)
What is detectable in virtually all patients exposed to hepatitis B? Can be positive in both acute and chronic infection.
Hepatitis B core Ab IgG (anti-HBc IgG)
What features would alert you if hepatotoxicity?
- Confusion due to hepatic encephalopathy
- Liver asterixis (flapping tremor)
- Yellow skin or sclera due to jaundice
- Bruising of the skin or bleeding of the gums or from anywhere due to clotting derangement
- Tenderness in the right upper quadrant due to liver inflammation
- Hepatomegaly
What are the initial non-specific usual symptoms in a paracetamol overdose?
- nausea/vomiting
- abdominal pain
What are signs and symptoms to be concerned about in a paracetamol overdose?
- acute confusion (encephalopathy)
- reduced urine output
- hypoglycaemia
- reduced consciousness — GCS
What is given in paracetamol overdose?
N-Acetylcysteine — it works by acting as a Glutathione donor, preventing toxic build-up of NAPQI
When should acetylcysteine treatment be commenced in a paracetamol overdose?
Acetylcysteine treatment should commence in patients:
- whose plasma-paracetamol concentration falls on or above the treatment line on the paracetamol treatment graph
- who present within 8 hours of ingestion of more than 150 mg/kg of paracetamol if there is going to be a delay of 8 hours or more in obtaining the paracetamol concentration after the overdose
- who present 8–24 hours after ingestion of an acute overdose of more than 150 mg/kg of paracetamol even if the plasma-paracetamol concentration is not yet available
- who present more than 24 hours after ingestion of an overdose if they are clearly jaundiced or have hepatic tenderness, their ALT is above the upper limit of normal (patients with chronically elevated ALT should be discussed with the National Poisons Information Service), their INR is greater than 1.3 (in the absence of another cause), or the paracetamol concentration is detectable.
Consider acetylcysteine treatment in patients who present within 24 hours of an overdose if biochemical tests suggest acute liver injury, even if the plasma paracetamol concentration is below the treatment line on the paracetamol treatment graph.
Patients who have ingested more than ____ mg/kg of paracetamol in any 24-hour period are at risk of serious toxicity
150