1 / 31

ACUTE LIVER FAILURE

ACUTE LIVER FAILURE. JM. JM male 10yrs referred from Kanyama health centre for further management of a patient with gen body swelliing and abd distension Presented with Headache 3/52 Yellow discoloration of eyes 3/52 Fever 2/52 Diarrhea (yellow stool) 3/7 and vomiting 5/7 ago

zelig
Télécharger la présentation

ACUTE LIVER FAILURE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACUTE LIVER FAILURE

  2. JM • JM male 10yrs referred from Kanyama health centre for further management of a patient with gen body swelliing and abd distension • Presented with • Headache 3/52 • Yellow discoloration of eyes 3/52 • Fever 2/52 • Diarrhea (yellow stool) 3/7 and vomiting 5/7 ago • Abd pains+ • Appetite +- • Swelling of feet 2/7 • NO H/O TRAVEL

  3. Review of Systems • GUT – frequencyo, dysuriao • CNS – seizureso, personality changeso • Resp – cougho, difficulties breathingo • CVS – palpitations • Skin – no h/o itchy skin

  4. PMHx and Drug Hx • Past hx unremarkable – DMo, asthmao, TBo, RVDo, epilepsyo • Treated with tricholine citrate syrup and ampicillin capsules • No known drug allergies

  5. Family and Social Hx • 1st born in a family of 3. No h/o paed death. • No FHx of DMo, asthmao, TBo, RVDo, epilepsyo • Child is in grade 3 • Mom is a domestic worker and dad is a bus-driver.

  6. Physical exam • Generally ill-looking, with a puffy face • Severely jaundiced, pale, not cyanosed • Afebrile • Not in Resp distress • Vitals: temp: 36.4 HR: 80bpm. RR: 20/min • RBS 3.9mmol/l • Chest: clear • CVS: S1S2 normal • P/A: distended, soft, non-tender, fluid-thrill positive. Lo So

  7. Urinalysis – bilirubin +++, glucose neg, SG 1020, pH 6.0 • U/S from local clinic suggested cholecystitis, fatty liver and ascites • RDT – (for malaria) negative • IMPRESSION: Typhoid fever r/o SCD r/o EPTB

  8. Plan • ADMIT • FBC/DC, solubility test, LFTs, lipid profile, group & save, HBsAg • Repeat U/S scan • CXRay • Urine M/C/S • Stool M/C/S • Antibiotics- xpen, ciprobid • Mebendazole, multivit, FA

  9. Day 2 - 6 • Fevers +++ • Stools not pale but quite bulky • Xmatched and received BT on day 4 • Ciprobid continued

  10. Day 7 • UTH u/s done: incompletely done • Patient noted to be in shock in the afternoon. Responded to normal saline and dextrose • ??hypoglycaemia….Noted absence of glucostix on the ward

  11. Day 8 • Noted conjugated hyperbilibunaemia and rise in hepatic enzymes > 5 times • ∆∆ r/o malignancy: lymphoma or hepatoma • Suspected hepatic failure and encephalopathy • Ordered: 10% dextrose infusion, low protein diet, oral gentamycin, peripheral smear, clotting profile, α-feto protein, repeat LFTs, CT scan abd, surgical input after CT.

  12. Day 10 – consultant’s notes • Noted poor improvement in clinical condition • Patient responding to name • No hepatic flap • Heard a grade 4 murmur loudest ULSB with lod P2 • Impression: Hepatitis with CHD with ?SABE • Ordered repeat U/s, f/up HBsAg, HCV, LFTs. To do ECG and Echo

  13. Day 9 - 10 • On day 9 Patient sent back from CT because was not prepared. Condition noted to be bad too – restless, irritable and not able to communicate verbally • Day 10: Patient started bleeding early hours of the morning • Certified dead at 07:55hrs

  14. Lab results

  15. ACUTE LIVER FAILURE

  16. DEFINITION • Acute liver failure is defined as "the rapid development of hepatocellular dysfunction, specifically coagulopathy and mental status changes (encephalopathy) in a patient without known prior liver disease". ALF indicates that the liver has sustained severe damage (loss of function of 80-90% of liver cells).

  17. One scheme defines "acute hepatic failure" as the development of encephalopathy within 26 weeks of the onset of any hepatic symptoms. • This is sub-divided into: • “fulminant hepatic failure", which requires onset of encephalopathy within 8 weeks • "subfulminant", which describes onset of encephalopathy after 8 weeks but before 26 weeks.

  18. Another scheme defines • "hyperacute" as onset within 7 days, • "acute" as onset between 7 and 28 days, • "subacute" as onset between 28 days and 24 weeks

  19. Functions of the liver • Is the largest gland in the body • Produces bile that enters the duodenum via bile duct • Synthesize Proteins and clotting factors • Synthesizes cholesterol • Regulates blood glucose level in body • Metabolic function- glycogenesis, glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis)

  20. Deamination of amino acids and converts ammonia to urea • Detoxifying chemical agents and poisons • Conjugates bilirubin • Immunological function

  21. AETIOLOGY

  22. Clinical features • Recent viral hepatitis or recent drug/toxic ingestion • Lethargy, nausea, vomiting, fever, abd pains, anorexia • Jaundice • Hepatic encephalopathy (minor beh, motor problems then confused, slurred speech then deep coma • Episodes of bleeding • Cardiac arrhythmias and hypotension • Rapidly decreasing hepatic size is ominous

  23. PATHOGENESIS • Impaired hepatocyte regeneration, altered parenchymal perfusion, endotoxemia, and decresed hepatic reticuloendothelial function • Hepatocyte necrosis is the common pathway with effects on hepatic synthetic function, excretory and detoxifying functions

  24. Hepatic encepalopathy – multifactorial…. • Ammonia theory • Synergism theory • False neurotransmitter theory • GABA (gamma-amino butyric acid ) neurotransmission theory

  25. Labs…. • Elevation of both conjugated and unconjugated bilirubin • Aminotransferases raised • Indices of hepatic function are altered (PT>50 secs or INR>4 have been assoc with poor prognosis) • Thrombocytopaenia

  26. Treatment • Mainly supportive • Coagulopathy: vit k, platelets, ffp, blood and H2-receptor blockers • Prophylax against bacterial and fungal infections • Electrolyte imbalance • Dextrose • reducing ammonia load (reduce protein load, sterilize the gut) • Reducing increased ICP

  27. Treating hepatic coma • ICU care • Endotracheal intubation and mech ventilation • Electrolytes and glucose by IV

  28. Liver transplant • Indications • Acute liver disease • Chronic liver disease • Primary biliary cirrhosis • Autoimmune hepatitis • Alcoholic liver disease • Primary metabolic conditions (wilsons, haemochromatosis, a antitrypsin deficiency

  29. Contraindications to liver transplant… • Active sepsis • Malignancies spread beyond the liver • Patient not psychologically ready • Metabolic condition • Relative contraindications • Age>65yrs • Anatomical considerations • Hepatocellular carcinoma:

  30. PROGNOSIS • Without liver transplant, mortality is greater than 80%, but with transplant some series reporting a survival rate of approximately 60%. • The risk of mortality increases with complications, which include cerebral edema, renal failure, adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), coagulopathy, and infection. • The etiologic factor and the development of complications are the main determinants of outcome in acute liver failure. • ALF caused by acetaminophen has a better prognosis • Patients with stage 3 or 4 encephalopathy have a poor prognosis.

More Related