General Hepatitis Notes
General Hepatitis Notes
Hepatitis in Malaysia
Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Hepatitis C
• Hepatitis A has been • Hepatitis B is moderately • Hepatitis C is growing;
reportable since 1988. prevalent (1.5-9.8%). 453,700 infected in 2009
• Government control • Transmission is often (2.5% of 15-64 population).
programs reduced incidence. mother-to-fetus. • 59% got infected through
• About 50% of young • 1 million have chronic injections.
Malaysians lack hepatitis A hepatitis B. • HCV burden is high and will
antibodies. • 75% of viral cases are rise without better treatment
• prevented by reinforcing the hepatitis B, mostly in males. and prevention.
hygiene status of the general • Chronic hepatitis B leads to
population most liver cancer cases.
• Hepatitis B vaccination
lowered prevalence to
0.01%.
Causes of hepatitis
1. Infections
a. Virus – hepatotropic – common
b. Other infectious organism – other viruses, bacterial, parasitic or helminthic - rare
2. Drugs and toxin induced – eg. Alcohol
3. Metabolic
4. Autoimmune
Serum - -
Transmission Varies according to geographic areas. Major route of transmissions are inoculation Groups at risks:
Usually and blood transfusion. • IVDU
• IVDU • IVDU-60% • Hemophiliacs
• Homosexual activity • Hemodialysis patients and health • Homosexuals
• Needle stick accidents among health care workers care workers- less than 5% • Health care workers
• Transfusion of blood and blood products • Sexual transmission-presumed risk
• Contact with body secretions through minor breaks in skin factors in 15%
and mucous membranes. • Perinatal transmission-6% of births
(from infected mothers)
high prevalence regions (eg. Africa, Asia) • Transfusion prior to 1991- 10%
• infected mother to a neonate during childbirth (vertical
transmission) is common.
• The majority of infections are contracted postnatally or
• perinatally.
• Carrier state → defined as presence of HBs Ag in the serum
for 6 months or longer after the initial detection.
Complications chronic hepatitis B (as persistence of the infection for > 6 months) Majority of infected individuals progress to Rarely develop chronicity
• 10% chronic hepatitis chronic disease
• liver cirrhosis
• 15-40% complication of Hepatocellular carcinoma
Three forms of alcohol related liver Usually have the following characteristics:
disease: • Female predominance (78%)
• Hepatic steatosis (fatty liver) • Absence of viral serologic marker
• Alcoholic hepatitis • Elevated serum IgG and γglobulin levels
• Alcoholic cirrhosis • High titers of serum auto Antibodies in 80% cases (ANA, ASMA)
• Negative anti mitochondrial antibody (AMA)
Pathogenesis a) Alcohol causes steatosis (fatty change) by:
• Shunting substrates toward lipid biosynthesis (more lipid is formed,
brought to be stored in the liver)
• Impairing lipoprotein assembly and secretion
• Increasing peripheral fat catabolism (degradation into fatty acids,
brought to be stored in the liver)
b) Overall, increase amount of fat deposited into liver cells.
c) Alcohol causes cellular injury through formation of:
• Free radicals
• Acetaldehyde generated from alcohol that induce lipid peroxidation
• Immunologic attack on hepatic antigens.
Eddy S.R.A/Eddy Saputra
• Nutrients displacement.
d) This injury results in inflammation – hepatitis
• Fibrosis
• Regenerative
nodules
• Loss of normal
architecture
•
d) PATHOGENESIS & FURTHER CHANGES
• Inflammation responds to stimuli/causes.
• Chronic inflammation leads to healing with fibrosis.
• Collagen deposition by perisinusoidal stellate cells (HSCs) causes fibrosis.
• Healing replaces necrotic hepatocytes with regenerated hepatocytes forming nodules.
• Progressive fibrosis disrupts normal architecture, altering hepatic blood flow and increasing hepatic venous
wedge pressure, resulting in portal hypertension.
• New vascular channels form, connecting portal region and central vein. Vascular shunting occurs, leading to
portal hypertension.
• Sinusoid walls thicken (like capillaries). impaired protein secretion (albumin, clotting factors, lipoprotein).
e) COMPLICATIONS
• Progressive liver failure.
• Portal hypertension-related complications (bleeding from esophageal varices).
• Hepatocellular carcinoma.
3. SPLENOMEGALY -
4. HEPATIC What is Hepatic Encephalopathy:
ENCEPHALOPATHY • Hepatic encephalopathy is a range of consciousness disturbances, from subtle
behavior changes to severe confusion, stupor (being unresponsive), coma, and even
death.
• It can develop slowly over days, weeks, or months.
Signs of Encephalopathy:
• Neurological signs can vary and may come and go.
• Signs include rigidity (muscle stiffness) and hyperreflexia (exaggerated reflexes).
• Asterixis is a specific tremor, like a flapping movement, usually seen in the hand
when the wrist is extended.
Morphologic changes
• Liver can shrink (500-700g) to a limp, red organ with wrinkled capsule
(Normal: 1400-1600g).
• Blotchy bile staining may appear.
• Microscopic:
EXTRAHEPATIC COMPLICATIONS
it refers to health problems that arise as a result of or in conjunction with liver dysfunction, but they affect organs or
systems outside of the liver itself.
• Coagulopathy and bleeding
• Cardiovascular instability
• Renal failure
• ARDS (Acute respiratory distress syndrome)
• Electrolyte and acid-base imbalance
• Sepsis
• Mortality rate: 25-90% without liver transplant