ACUTE LIVER FAILURE
Acute liver failure is defined as the rapid development of hepatocellular dysfunction (WITHIN 8 WEEKS OF DISEASE ONSET), specifically coagulopathy and mental status changes (encephalopathy) in a patient without known prior liver disease.The commonest causes are viral hepatitis ( A , B,C,E) and drugs and toxins( commonest is acetaminophen)
Hepatic Failure
Most severe clinical consequence of liver diseaseMay be:
result of sudden and massive hepatic destruction
end-point of progressive chronic liver disease ( the name here is called decompensated liver )
80% - 90% loss of hepatic functional capacity
Hepatic Failure
Morphologic alterations causing liver failure:Massive hepatic necrosis
Mechanisms:
(i) direct damage to hepatocytes
(ii) immune-mediated hepatocyte destruction
a. drug or toxin-induced
b. infection – viral hepatitis except hep. C
Chronic liver disease – most common cause
Hepatic dysfunction without over necrosis – e.g. Reye’s syndrome, tetracycline toxicity, acute fatty liver of pregnancy
Hepatic Failure
Clinical Features:
Jaundice
Hypoalbuminemia peripheral edema
Hyperammonemia cerebral dysfunction
Fetor hepaticus “musty” or “sweet & sour” body odor due to mercaptan formation by action of GI bacteria on methionine (sulfur-containing)
Impaired estrogen metabolism hyperestrogenemia
(a) palmar erythema – 2o to local vasodilatation
(b) spider angiomas – central, pulsing, dilated arteriole from which small vessels radiate
(c) hypogonadism & gynecomastia in males
Hepatic Failure
Clinical Features:Multi-organ system failure
respiratory failure with pneumonia, sepsis + renal failure cause of death
Coagulopathy
impaired synthesis of factors II, VII, IX and X (+) bleeding tendency
Hepatic Failure
Complications:Hepatic encephalopathy
associated with increased blood ammonia levelsreversible if underlying hepatic condition can be corrected
features:
(a) change in consciousness
(b) fluctuating neurologic signs – rigidity, hyperreflexia, asterixis
Hepatic Failure
Complications:Hepatorenal syndrome
renal failure in patients with chronic liver diseasemain renal functional abnormalities:
(a) sodium retention
(b) impaired free water excretion
(c) decreased renal perfusion
(d) decreased GFR
Hepatic Failure
Complications:
Hepatorenal syndrome
decreased urine output with rising BUN & creatinineability to concentrate urine retained hyperosmolar urine without proteins; abnormal sediments; dec. Na+