What does the liver metabolise?
What does the liver synthesise?
What are the liver immune cells called?
Kupffer
What does the liver store?
Fat soluble vitamins A, D, E, K, B12 and folic acid
What is bilirubin and what is the normal range?
At what level of bilirubin is clinical jaundice?
> 50 micromol/L
In what situations doe bilirubin levels increase?
Levels increase in liver damage, haemolysis and cholestasis (reduction in bile flow)
What is ALP and what is the normal range?
Alkaline phosphatase
If ALP is raised, what could that indicate?
What is GGT and what is the normal range?
* Found in liver and binary epithelial cells, pancreas, kidneys, prostate, intestine
GGT can be increased without any liver damage. What could be the reason behind this?
Levels increase by enzyme inducers of GGT e.g. cancer, alcohol without there being damage to liver
What is albumin and what is the normal range?
What could a decreased level of albumin lead to and mean?
Can lead to oedema
Decreased in chronic liver disease and when someone is malnourished
What could an increased prothrombin time/INR indicate?
* Increases in acute and chronic liver disease
What is an important thing to consider about LFTs in diagnosing liver dysfunction?
They are non specific
Generally, if there are 2 x upper limit of normal and you need at least 2 factors However, even in end stage liver disease, LFTs can come back normal because there are not enough hepatocytes working properly to produce some of those enzymes
You can also get impaired LFTs with no liver dysfunction e.g. infection
What are inherited and metabolic disorders causing liver disease?
Wilson’s disease- cannot excrete copper
Glycogen storage disease
What are signs and symptoms of chronic liver disease?
What treatment is given in alcohol withdrawal and why?
If the patient does not have enough clotting factors due to hepatic dysfunction, how would you give Pabrinex and why?
Patient is coagulopathic as they do not have enough clotting factors- IM would give them a haematoma and would be very uncomfortable. Needs to be giving slowly because can get an allergic like reaction if given too quickly
What is Wernike’s encephalopathy and what causes it?
Learning and memory impaired, mortality risk. Caused by biochemical lesions of the CNS after exhaustion of B-vitamin reserves
If Werenike’s is not managed. what could it lead to?
Korsakoff’s syndrome, a chronic memory disorder
Why do you give a longer acting BDZ in alcohol withdrawal?
Slower onset of action and less likely to be addicted
What is the PK of BDZ in terms of metabolism?
BDZs are highly lipophilic and undergoes extensive liver metabolism, with most forming active metabolites
When would a shorter acting BDZ be appropriate in alcohol withdrawal?
Significant hepatic impairment as they may not be able to break down a longer acting one
e.g. Lorazepam or ozaxepam as they do not have active metabolites