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Chief, Division of Gastroenterology
ACUTE LIVER FAILURE Milton G. Mutchnick, M.D. Professor of Medicine Chief, Division of Gastroenterology Wayne State University School of Medicine
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Acute Liver Failure Rapid deterioration of liver function
resulting in altered mentation and coagulopathy in a patient without preexisting cirrhosis and with an illness of less than 26 weeks duration.
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Acute Liver Failure….AKA
Fulminant hepatic failure Fulminant hepatitis Subfulminant liver failure Subacute hepatic necrosis Subacute liver failure Hyperacute liver failure
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Index of Suspicion for ALF
Clinical signs of moderate to severe hepatitis Laboratory findings including an increase in the prothrombin time of 4-6sec.(INR ≥ 1.5). Altered sensorium INR ≥ Altered Mental Status = ALF ≥
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Suspect ALF?..........Admit to ICU
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Etiology of ALF Acute viral hepatitis (A - E) Mushroom poisoning
Acetaminophen Acute fatty liver of pregnancy Chemical agents
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Drug-induced hepatitis
Budd-Chiari Syndrome VOD of liver Wilson’s disease AIH
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ALF Etiologies Viral Drug Poisoning Ischemia VOD Malignant Infiltrate
Wilson’s Disease Microvesicular steatosis AIH Hyperthermia OLT Partial hepatectomy
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Etiology of ALF in 342 Cases (University Hospital, London UK)
Drugs-Overdose Other Acetaminophen Wilson’s Ecstasy Fatty liver of pregnancy 7 Lymphoma/ Viral Hepatitis malignant infiltrate HAV Sepsis HBV Budd-Chiari Non A-E Ischemia Miscellaneous Idiosyncratic Drug Reactions Lamotrigine, cyproterone, NSAID, chloroguine, rifampin/ INH halothane, flucloxacillin
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U.S. ALF STUDY GROUP 2003 (308 Patients, 73% Women)
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Viral Acute Hepatitis A-E Reactivation of HBV Chemotherapy
Immunosuppresion Herpes simplex Varicella-Zoster EBV
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Acute HAV and ALF Frequency 0.01% - 0.1% in jaundiced patients
ALF uncommon Frequency 0.01% - 0.1% in jaundiced patients ALF occurs early Survival (transplant- free) 75% Age related survival
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Acute HBV and ALF HBV alone or with HDV co-infection (rare)
Transplant-free survival is 23% Overall survival 77% because of transplantation
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HBV Markers in ALF IgM Anti HBc 100% HBsAg 90% HBV DNA (Abbott) 10%
*Absence of HBsAg favors better prognosis (47% v 17%). Higher frequency ALF with mutant HBV form
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Drug Induced ALF Many drugs implicated Acetaminophen
Halothone and derivatives INH/ Rifampin Tricyclics/ MAO inhibitors Phenytoin/ NSAID Increased risk: acetaminophen (as little as 2gms) + ETOH median dose: 13 gm Increased risk if drug continued after jaundice appears
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Poisoning and ALF Amanita mushrooms (amanatoxins)
- LD = 50 gms (3 mushrooms) - Toxins not destroyed by cooking - Rapid onset of HE in 4-8 days following severe emesis and diarrhea Solvents - chlorinated hydrocarbons Herbal remedies Yellow phosphorus
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Ischemic Hepatitis and ALF
Liver cell necrosis - massive scale Cardiac tamponade Acute heart failure Pulmonary embolus Hepatic artery thrombosis
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Obstruction of Hepatic Veins and ALF
Budd-Chiari syndrome and thrombosis of hepatic veins VOD - Post BMT Chemotherapy, Irradiation
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Massive Malignant Infiltration of the Liver
Attributed to ischemic changes Leukemia, lymphoma Malignant histiocytosis Metastatic Replacement
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Other Etiologic Causes of ALF
Wilson’s Disease can be presenting feature usually in patients <20 yrs can occur if patient discontinued D-penicillamine for a few years
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Other Etiologies (2) Microvesicular steatosis
Acute fatty liver of pregnancy Reye’s syndrome Drug Induced - Valproic acid AIH May appear as an acute hepatitis on initial presentation More common if anti-LKMI antibody present ASMA usually not present
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Other Etiologies (3) Hyperthermia (Heat stroke) Direct thermal injury
Hepatic ischemia due to -DIC -Perfusion defect OLT Poor presentation of donor liver Acute graft rejection Thrombosis - hepatic artery, hepatic vein, portal vein Partial hepatectomy Removal of 80% or more of healthy liver Removal of 50% or less in hepatic dysfunction
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Evaluation & Diagnosis of Impending ALF
History! History! History! Sexual contacts IDU Risk Factors Pregnancy Mushrooms Medications Travel Toxic exposures
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HISTORY Family members with liver disease? Recent cold sores
Onset of jaundice Work environment- toxic agents Hobbies Herbal products/dietary supplements
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Physical Exam Determine presence or absence
of pre-existing liver disease Hepatic tenderness Hepatic decompensation
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Laboratory Tests (1) ALT, AST, Alk Phos, Glu, Bilirubin
Drug screening ALT, AST, Alk Phos, Glu, Bilirubin Lytes, Albumin, Mg, Phos., CBC with differential Coags: PT, PTT Anti HAV IgM Anti HBc IgM/ Anti HBsAg/ Anti-HCV
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Laboratory Tests (2) If under 35 years of age Ceruloplasmin
Serum & urine copper Arterial blood gas Arterial lactate Pregnancy test Autoimmune markers – ANA, ASMA, Ig levels HIV status Amylase & lipase
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Reserved for diagnostic dilemma - (Transjugular approach)
Liver Biopsy Reserved for diagnostic dilemma - AIH, HS (Transjugular approach)
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Diagnosis of ALF Hallmarks - occurs simultaneously or in succession
Altered mentation Clinical EEG Arterial Ammonia Coagulopathy PT 4 sec prolonged (INR≥ 1.5) Arterial pH<7.3 if acetaminophen ingested (cause for immediate transfer for OLT)
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Management of ALF (1) Directed towards prevention of complications
ICU setting Central line(s)-10% dextrose Pulmonary artery pressure and CO Inform Transplant Service and transfer with onset of HE Monitor VS and urinary output (Foley) strict I&O Laboratory Testing every 4-6hr electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, CBC, platelets, PT, PTT, ALT, AST, T. bilirubin, Alk Phos, Albumin
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Management (2) Maintain gastric pH above 5 - protonix IV
Preparation for endotracheal intubation Prepare to initiate monitoring intracranial pressure Enteral feeding tubes for grade 3 or 4 coma
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Cerebral Edema Cerebral Perfusion Pressure
Mean Arterial Pressure – ICP = Cerebral Perfusion Pressure (CPP) Ideal ICP<20-25mm Hg Ideal CPP>50-60mm Hg Imazaki, et al When CPP<40 for 2 hrs. 0 of 7 patients recovered When CPP>50 6 of 8 patients recovered Improved ICP first sign of spontaneous recovery
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Management (3) Cerebral Edema & Intracranial Hypertension
(Most serious complications of ALF) Clinical signs of elevated ICP (Intracranial Pressure) -sluggish pupillary response -increased limb-muscle tone -none Monitoring ICP -usually reserved for grade 3 or 4 coma -awaiting OLT
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Management (4) Cerebral Edema - General Measures -quiet environment
-elevate head 10°-20° -avoid sedation (use restraints) -avoid Valsalva-like maneuvers -mental status assessments q1-2h -mannitol if signs of impending uncal herniation (0.5mg/kg, lolus q4-8h) when ICP<30-40mm -assisted ventilation (in all grade 3 and 4)
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Multiple Organ Failure
Hepatic damage increased risk of infection Failure of clearance Endotoxemia Gut leak MOF Activation of macrophages Tissue Circulating Release of Hypoxia changes cytokines TNF, IL-1, IL-6 Williams, Sem Liver Dis, Vol 16, No.4, 1996
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Management (5) Hemodynamic Complications include:
Hypotension, tachycardia, vascular volume decrease with capillary leak and vasodilation Volume expansion (central line) FFP or 4.5% albumin, 10% dextrose Maintain pulmonary capillary wedge pressure 12mm-14mm Hg Minimize salt solutions (ascites, interstitial accumulation) Inotropic/pressor support(epi, norepi, dopamine), but not vasopressin.
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Management (6) Coagulopathy/Bleeding Diathesis
FFP or platelets given in presence of bleeding Conventional treatment of GI bleeding DIC thrombocytopenia Metabolic Complications Prevent hypoglycemia Phosphate and magnesium levels monitored - replace early Enteral feeding, 60gm protein/24 hrs No role for high branched-chain AA Monitor for lactic acidosis secondary to tissue hypoxia, sepsis
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(CI = cardiac output/body surface area)
Role of Cardiac Index (CI = cardiac output/body surface area) ALF associated with high CI Presence of low CI (<4.5L/min) is bad prognostic sign Look for - blood loss, pneumothorax lactic acidosis, cardiac tamponade
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Management (7) Renal Failure - In 42% to 82% of ALF
poor prognostic sign - Rising creatinine and oliguria - Metabolites of acetaminophen are nephrotoxic leading to acute renal failure similar to ATN and loss of phosphate -HRS
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Additional Complications
ARDS Sepsis - Severe complement deficiency - Decreased PMN motility - Decreased Kupffer cell function and removal of endotoxins - Increased levels of TNF and IL-6
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Prognostic Factors Dependent on Etiology
Younger patients do better (<40 and >10) Presence of cerebral edema Delay between jaundice and HE of more than 3 weeks - poorer prognosis MOF - poor prognosis
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Current Treatment Transplantation
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Temporary Measures Hemodialysis - no proven benefit on survival
Charcoal hemoperfusion - no proven benefit Resins (Cation or anion - exchange) - not proven Extracoporeal liver perfusions - may be bridge to OLT Hepatocyte transplants (peritoneum) - uncertain Capillary hollow-fiber system - unproven, ?bridge
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OUTCOME RESULTS U.S. ALF STUDY GROUP
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Approach to Suspected ALF
Etiology and Pathogenesis Evaluation and Diagnosis Complications Management Prognosis Current and future treatment approaches
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