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(E) Alterations of the liver, gall bladder, and pancreas
Patho 2
80
Medical
Undergraduate 2
06/04/2014

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Term
What are the tasks of the liver?
Definition
- The main task of the liver is to maintain metabolic homeostasis, it doe this by:
- PROCESSING dietary amino acids, lipids, carbohydrates, and vitamins.
- SYNTHESIZING serum proteins.
- DETOXIFICATION and excretion of waste products.
Term
Explain the consequences of damage to the liver.
Definition
- Damage to the liver can cause far reaching consequences in other parts of the body due to the body requiring the stable metabolic function of the liver.
Term
List the normal liver anatomy
Definition
- Dual blood supply
- Lobule: functional units of the liver
- Portal Triad:
> Branch of the hepatic artery
> branch of the portal vein
> branch of the bile duct
- Blood flow: periphery through the sinusoids towards the central vein.
- Kupffer's cells
Term
What are the major functions of the liver?
Definition
- METABOLIC: The liver metabolizes carbohydrates, fats, and proteins.
- EXCRETORY: The liver excretes bile, a mixture of bilirubin, bile salts, lipids, and other minor components.
- STORAGE: The liver storages carbohydrates and lipids.
- SYNTHETIC: The liver synthesizes major plasma proteins including albumin, coagulation proteins, and many transport proteins.
Term
What is hepatic encephalopathy?
Definition
- Cephalic = head, pathy = disease
- If certain materials, such as ammonia are not filtered out by the liver, it can cause neurological problems.
Term
T or F
Certain viruses prefer to affect the liver.
Definition
True
An example of a disease would be hepatotropism.
Term
Liver cells can/cannot regenerate?
Definition
- Liver cells CAN REGENERATE.
- New hepatocytes will rise from the remaining healthy tissue.
- CIRRHOSIS: regeneration takes place, but because of FIBROSIS, NODULES form instead of normal tissue.
Term
What is the livers relationship with getting cancer?
Definition
- The liver CAN give rise to primary tumors, but it is much more involved through METASTASIS.
Term
T or F
Bile can form gallstones.
Definition
True
Can form gallstones, that may cause obstruction or inflammation.
Term
Explain Normal Bilirubin Metabolism
(BIG explanation)
Definition
1) Old RBC's are broken down by phagocytic cells of the SPLEEN or KUPFFER cells of the LIVER.
2) Hemoglobin --> Heme + Globin
3) Heme loses iron --> Biliverdin (green pigment) --> Bilirubin (yellow pigment)
4) Bilirubin is released to the blood where it binds to ALBUMIN (UNCONJUGATED - NOT WATER SOLUBLE)
5) Becomes taken up by the liver and becomes CONJUGATED (WATER-SOLUBLE)
6) Conjugated bilirubin is excreted in BILE and sent to the INTESTINES to help break down FATS (EMULSIFIER)
7) Unused bilirubin is converted into UROBILINOGEN by the intestinal bacteria.
> 20% is reabsorbed and sent back to the liver
> 80% is excreted in feces
8) ENTEROHEPATIC CIRCULATION: most of the bile salts are reabsorbed and sent back to the liver (in the Ileum via the hepatic portal v.)
Term
What is another name for Jaundice?
Definition
Icterus
Term
Jaundice is a ______, NOT a ________.
Definition
- Symptom
- Disease
Term
What characterizes Jaundice?
Definition
- Yellow discoloration of the skin and mucosa.
Term
What causes Jaundice?
Definition
- Caused by elevated BILIRUBIN levels in the BLOOD. (HYPERBILIRUBINEMIA)
Term
What is the normal amount of bilirubin in the blood?
Amt. with Jaundice?
Definition
- Normal Bilirubin levels: < 1.2 mg/dl
- With Jaundice: > 2-3 mg/dl
Term
What are the different classifications of Jaundice?
Definition
- Prehepatic
- Hepatic
- Postheptatic
Term
Describe the classification of Jaundice: Prehepatic
Definition
- UNCONJUGATED Hyperbilirubinemia
- SECONDARY to HEMOLYSIS
Term
Describe the classification of Jaundice: Hepatic
Definition
- MIXED conjugation types
- Viral Hepatitis, Alcohol liver, Cirrhosis, Tumors, Drugs
Term
Describe the classification of Jaundice: Posthepatic
Definition
- CONJUGATED Hyperbilirubinemia
- Obstructive (gallstones, tumors)
Term
Explain the Physiologic and Pathology behind Jaundice in newborns
Definition
- Physiologic:
> transient, benign, the first week of life
> mild unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia
- Pathologic ( > 15 mg/dl)
> premature infants
> ABO incompatibility
> phototherapy (helps cure)
> exchange transfusion
>> when levels are 18-20 mg/dl
>> can cross neonatal BBB and cause Cerebral palsy
Term
Histologically, damage to the liver is seen as...?
Definition
- Necrosis of liver cells
- Fat accumulation
Term
Explain the extent of liver injuries.
Definition
- Mild: Liver cells may completely RECOVER
- Severe: Could lead to severe scarring
Term
Multiple episodes of mild liver injury could have an _______ effect.
Definition
accumulative
Term
What is considered LIVER FAILURE?
Definition
- When 80-90% of the liver function is gone.
Term
Explain VIRAL HEPATITIS
Definition
- DIFFUSE INFLAMMATION throughout the lobules.
- Associated with liver cell SWELLING, and liver cell NECROSIS
- Variable clinical symptoms:
- ill and jaundiced
- ill and not jaundiced
- subclinical hepatitis (having viral hepatitis but being asymptomatic)
Term
Hepatitis A aka:
Definition
Infection hepatitis
Term
Hepatitis B aka:
Definition
serum hepatitis
Term
Hepatitis C aka:
Definition
Non-A, Non-B
Term
Hepatitis D aka:
Definition
Delta hepatitis
- only found in people who have Hepatitis B
- less common
Term
Explain Hepatitis E
Definition
- Often found in THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES
- Fecal-oral route: contaminated water
Term
Explain Hepatitis A (HAV)
Definition
- It is an RNA virus, with a 2-6 week INCUBATION PERIOD (takes that long before it'll displayed symptoms in the host.)
- Transmission:
> Direct contact (fecal-oral route)
> Fecal contamination of FOOD or WATER
> often occurs in EPIDEMICS
- The virus is SELF-LIMITING (the immune system will kill off on its own)
- Has NO CHRONIC CARRIERS
- VACCINE available
Term
Explain Hepatitis B (HBV)
Definition
- DNA VIRUS with a 6 wk - 4 mo. incubation period.
- Transmission:
> Blood
> Body fluids
- Most infected individuals will eliminate the virus, but about 10% become CHRONIC CARRIERS
- Some chronic carriers develop CHRONIC HEPATITIS
- Vaccine available
Term
Explain Hepatitis C (HCV)
Definition
- C as in it's Crappy if you get it.
- RNA virus with a 35-65 day INCUBATION PERIOD.
- Transmission:
> blood
> body fluids
- Most individuals who get it CANNOT eliminate it and become chronic carriers.
- Most chronic carriers develop chronic hepatitis & cirrhosis
- NO VACCINE AVAILABLE
Term
Explain FATTY LIVER
Definition
- A disease in which FAT accumulates in the liver cells, IMPAIRING normal liver function.
- Most common Etiologies:
> Excessive alcohol
> volatile solvents
> drugs and chemicals
> some poisons
- Can be REVERSIBLE if the injurious agent is removed.
Term
Explain ALCOHOLIC LIVER DISEASE
Definition
- Think of as "3 phases"
- Phase 1: ALCOHOLIC FATTY LIVER
> Mildest form
> REVERSIBLE if you stop drinking
- Phase 2: ALCOHOLIC HEPATITIS
> Liver cell degeneration
> Leukocyte infiltration
> MALLORY BODIES: irregular pink deposits in the cytoplasm
- Phase 3: ALCOHOLIC CIRRHOSIS
- Diffuse SCARRING throughout the liver that disturbs liver FUNCTION and BLOOD FLOW.
Term
Explain the pathophysiology behind ALCOHOLIC CIRRHOSIS
Definition
- Ethanol metabolism results in toxic oxygen radical, acetaldehyde, and DNA damage.
- Ethanol causes fat to be stored in the liver --> ALCOHOLIC FOAMY STEATOSIS (fatty liver)
- Ethanol also causes there to be an INFLAMMATORY response where lots of COLLAGEN is produced.
- Acetaldehyde stimulates hepatic FIBROSIS.
- This all results in impaired function of the liver.
Term
Explain what Cirrhosis of the liver is and what characterizes it.
Definition
- Cirrhosis of the liver is an end stage CHRONIC liver disease characterized by:
> bridging septa that causes masses of scar tissue
> degenerating and regeneration of island of hepatocytes
> disruption of the ARCHITECTURE of the entire liver
Term
What are the most common causes of Cirrhosis?
Definition
- Alcoholic liver disease
- Chronic Hepatitis (usually HBC or HCV)
Term
What are some of the less common causes of Cirrhosis?
Definition
- Severe episode of liver necrosis
- Varous chemicals or drugs
- genetic diseases
- chronic bile duct obstruction
Term
CIRRHOSIS;
Progressive fibrosis of the liver results in:
Definition
- Severe disruption of the portal blood flow
- Impaired diffusion of solutes between hepatocytes and plasma
Term
What are some major functional disturbances in the liver caused by Cirrhosis?
Definition
- Impaired liver function (including from excess ESTROGEN) --> (Normally estrogen is inactivated in the liver for men)
- Portal hypertension
Term
Cirrhosis can also lead to the development of what?
Definition
Hepatoceullar Carcinoma
(Cirrhosis has a high risk of developing cancer associated with it)
Term
Define Portal Hypertension
Definition
- An increased pressure in the portal system due to an increased PORTAL BLOOD FLOW OR INCREASED *RESISTANCE* to hepatic perfusion.
Term
What kind of PREHEPATIC problems can cause portal hypertension?
Definition
- Thrombi and narrowing of portal vein
- Splenomegaly can shunt excessive blood
Term
What kind of INTRAHEPATIC problems can cause portal hypertension?
Definition
- Cirrhosis
- Tumors
Term
What kind of POSTHEPATIC problems can cause portal hypertension?
Definition
- Severe RIGHT-sided heart failure
Term
Venous return to the IVC is impaired, causing pressure in the portal veins to ____.
Definition
Increase
Term
What are the major clinical consequences of portal hypertension?
Definition
- Ascitis
- Shunting of blood into collaterals
> due to high pressure, blood will find a lower pressure system to get around
> can cause hemorrhoids, or esophageal varices
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Congestive splenomegaly
> may secondarily cause a variety of hematologic abnormalities
Term
What two main factors causes ASCITES in relation to portal hypertension?
Definition
1) Increased PORTAL VEIN PRESSURE causes fluid to leak outside of the capillaries.
2) DECREASED production of ALBUMIN
> Albumin is produced in the liver
> Decreased colloid osmotic pressure in blood
Term
Explain Shunting of blood in relation to portal hypertension
Definition
- With high portal vein pressure, collaterals will form to bypass the obstructed liver
- Stomach & Spleen --> SPLENOMEGALY
- esophageal veins --> ESOPHAGEAL VARICES --> frequently rupture --> hemorrhage
- Rectal area --> HEMORRHOIDS
Term
Explain Hepatic Encephalopathy
Definition
- A spectrum of disturbances in consciousness: from subtle behavioral changes, to marked confusion, stupor, coma, or even death.
- Hepatic Encephalopathy is due to the shunting of blood around the diseased liver, which exposes the brain to metabolites, such as AMMONIA (able to cross the BBB)
- Liver normally metabolizes ammonia and converts it into urea, which can't cross the BBB).
Term
Explain SPLENOMEGALY
Definition
- Spleen normally weighs 150 grams
- With Splenomegaly it weighs 500-1000 grams
- Tends to sequester and destroy blood cells resulting in anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia.
Term
What can CAUSE splenomegaly?
Definition
- CONGESTIVE causes: Cirrhosis, CHF, obstruction in the splenic vein, portal hypertension.
- INFLAMMATION or INFECTION: viral, or bacterial
- INFILTRATIVE ways: amyloidosis, diabetic lipemia
- TUMORS OR CYSTS: leukemia, Hodgkin's, metastasis
Term
Explain LIVER FAILURE
Definition
- When 80-90% of hepatic functional capacity is gone.
DECOMPENSATION: may RESULT from systemic infection, electrolyte disturbances, stress (major surgery, heart failure) and GI bleeding.
- THREE MORPHOLIC CATEGORIES OF DECOMPENSATION:
> MASSIVE HEPATIC NECROSIS: DIRECT damage to the hepatocytes from TOXINS
> CHRONIC LIVER DISEASE: Ending in CIRRHOSIS
> HEPATIC DYSFUNCTION: WITHOUT overt NECROSIS
Term
Explain the CLINICAL signs of liver failure.
Definition
Although multiple reasons can cause liver failure, no matter what causes it, the clinical signs will be the same.
- JAUNDICE: Liver doesn't process bilirubin
- HYPOALBUMINEMIA: Decreased OSMOTIC pressure --> Edema/Ascites
- HYPERESTROGENEMIA: local vasodilation of the skin; For MEN: testicular atrophy, gynecomastia (man boobs)
- HYPERAMMONEMIA: Hepatic Encephalopathy
- COAGULOPATHY: Innability to clot since liver normally synthesizes clotting factors
- With liver failure, increased chance of other organ systems failing (ex. splenomegaly)
Term
Explain CHOLELITHIASIS
Definition
- Formation of stones in the gall bladder.
- 20% of the population.
- Stones are entirely or predominantly CHOLESTEROL.
- Due to an insufficient amount of bile salts IN RELATION TO the amount of cholesterol.
Term
Explain the INCIDENCE of Cholelithiasis
Definition
- More likely to happen in WOMEN than men: Estrogen increases excretion of cholesterol, and decreases the excretion of bile salts.
- More likely in women who have had CHILDREN, than childless women.
- More likely in OBESE women, than normal weight women
- TWICE as high in women who use oral contraceptive than those who use other forms of birth control.
Term
Explain the COMPLICATIONS of gallstones
Definition
- Stones and become lodged in the cystic duct and cause:
> BILIARY COLIC: Severe Abdominal pain with smooth m. spasm
> CHOLECYSTITIS: Inflammation of the gall bladder
> OBSTRUCTIVE JAUNDICE: Stone blocks duct, bile backs up into the liver.
Term
Explain Biliary Cirrhosis
Definition
- Inflammation of the bile DUCTS
Term
Explain the different types of Biliary Cirrhosis
Definition
- PRIMARY biliary cirrhosis
> Chronic inflammation and destruction of the INTRAHEPATIC bile ducts.
> AUTOANTIBODIES against the bile duct epithelium.
> Jaundice, Itchy Skin, Xanthoma (fat buildup under skin)

SECONDARY (OBSTRUCTIVE) Biliary Cirrhosis
> Due to longstanding blockage of the EXTRAHEPATIC bile ducts (gallstone, carcinoma)
> Causes stasis of the bile and back up pressure in the bile ducts --> Cholestasis
> followed by portal tract scarring and inflammation
Term
Explain CHOLESTASIS
Definition
- Def: RETENTION OF THE BILE due to hepatic dysfunction or biliary obstruction.
- obstruction of the biliary tree causes DISTENSION of bile ducts upstream from it.
- BACK-PRESSURE causes edema and inflammation
- ELEVATED serum alkaline phosphatase
- Location of obstruction:
EXTRAHEPATIC: obstruction of the common bile duct from either a gall stone, or a pancreatic tumor
INTRAHEPATIC: Cirrhosis of the liver, or liver tumor
Term
Explain what's going on inside of CHOLESTASIS
Definition
- Hepatocytes enlarge
- dilated canalicular spaces
- bile duct proliferation
- edema and pigment retention with inflammation
Term
Explain TUMORS of the liver and gallbladder
Definition
- Primary Carcinoma
> RARE in the united states and canada
> COMMON in african and asian countries: WHY?
>> High incidence of chronic Hep B carriers

LIVER is COMMON site of metastatic carcinoma: WHY?
- Dual blood supply, highly VASCULARIZED
Term
NORMAL PANCREAS physiology
Definition
- Has both EXOCRINE and ENDOCRINE functions
When you think EXOCRINE think DUCTS
- "Pancreatic Juice" --> ducts
- Alkaline buffers
- Digestive enzymes
When you think ENDOCRINE think into the BLOOD
- Hormones --> blood
> ALPHA: GLUCAGON (releases glucagon when glucose is all gone)
> BETA: INSULIN
> DELTA: SOMATOSTATIN (inhibits gastric activity)
Term
Explain ACUTE PANCREATITIS
Definition
- Due to the escape of pancreatic juices from its pancreatic ducts
- Clinical signs:
- Severe abdominal pain
- Vomiting
- High mortality
Risk Factors:
> Gallbladder disease: blockage of pancreatic and common ducts
> Excessive alcohol consumption:
>> 1) stimulates pancreatic solutions
>> 2) causes a spasm of the hepatopancreatic sphincter
Term
Explain CYSTIC FIBROSIS of the PANCREAS
Definition
CF: Abnormal chloride transport across cell membranes
- Causes lots of thick mucus secretions that block the pancreatic ducts, bronchi, bronchioles, and bile ducts
- Blocked pancreatic ducts --> build up of juice --> cystically dilated ducts beome surrounded with dense fibrous tissue.
Term
What is: Maldigestion
Definition
- Failure of the CHEMICAL process of digestion
Term
What is: Malabsorbtion?
Definition
- Failure of the intestinal mucosa to ABSORB and TRANSPORT digested nutrients.
Term
What is: Pancreatic Insufficiency
Definition
- Inadequate production of digestion enzymes leading to poor digestion of food, especially fats --> gas formation, diarrhea
Term
What is: Lactase deficiency
Definition
Undigested lactose -> gas formation, OSMOTIC diarrhea
= lactose intolerance
Term
What is: Bile Salt Deficiency
Definition
Leads to poor absorption of fats, and fat-soluble vitamins.
Term
What does Vitamin A deficiency cause?
Definition
Night blindness
Term
What does Vitamin D deficiency cause?
Definition
Decreased calcium absorption leading to bone (D)emineralization.
Term
What does Vitamin K deficiency cause?
Definition
Blood Klotting (clotting) deficiency
Term
What does Vitamin E deficiency cause?
Definition
Testicular Atrophy, and neurologic defects in children
Term
What causes malabsorption syndromes?
Definition
- Advanced liver disease, obstruction of the common bile duct, diseases of the ileum (Krohn's disease)
Term
Explain PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA
Definition
- Increased rate in smokers (30%) and there's a hereditary factor (10%)
- One of the highest mortality rates (15% over 5 years)
- Often occurs at the HEAD of the pancreas
- Often block the COMMON BILE DUCT resulting in: OBSTRUCTIVE JAUNDICE
Term
Explain INSULINOMA
Definition
- Benign tumor of the ISLET CELLS.
- Often cause episodes of severe HYPOGLYCEMIA --> Leads to SEIZURING
Term
Explain what CAUSES HYPERGLYCEMIA, and what RESULTS from it.
Definition
~ Causes of Hyperglycemia: ~
- Diabetes Mellitus
> decrease in insulin
- Chronic Pancreatic disease
> damage of the pancreatic islets
- Various diseases that cause overproduction of Adrenal and Pituitary hormones
> ACTH and glucocorticoids raise blood glucose levels
- Various drugs
- A few rare hereditary disorders
- Hyperglycemia results in: KETOACIDOSIS
Term
Explain the CAUSES of HYPOGLYCEMIA as well as what RESULTS from it.
Definition
~ Causes of HYPOGLYCEMIA in diabetics ~
- Reduced intake of food
- Increased physical exercise
- Insulin overdose
- Iatrogenic (medically induced)
- Benign tumor of the beta cells (insulinoma)
- Results of Hypoglycemia
- confusion --> loss of consciousness --> convulsions --> coma --> death
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