https://www.hepvic.org.au/news/2224/hot-news-resources-for-your-liver-and-your-health
Autoimmune Hepatitis
-
- Chronic, progressive, autoimmune disease of the liver
- Unknown cause; thought to be activated by environmental trigger- infections, medications, vaccines, viruses
- Auto-reactive T-cells recognize an antigen and stimulate the secretion of cytokines inducing inflammation
- WHY:
- More common in women & children
- S/SX of P.A.: jaundice, fatigue, weight loss
-
- WHY NOT:
- S/SX affiliated with autoimmune hepatitis: many different presentations- usually asymptomatic, but can be moderate-severe mirroring cirrhosis or liver failure. Typically accompanied by joint pain due to antigen-antibody complexes (Heneghan, 2019).
- SOCIAL HX: IVDU
- *diagnosed by exclusion of other diseases & labs (increased IgG)
- WHY NOT:
https://verywellhealth.com/autoimmune-diseases-overview-3232654
(McCance & Huether, 2019)
Cirrhosis
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- Fibrotic, inflammatory liver disease; irreversible
- Caused by other disorders (alcoholism, viral, fatty liver disease, toxins)
- Cellular injury leads to structural and fibrotic changes via inflammatory response and Kupffer cell activation
- Extensive fibrosis obstructs/shunts blood flow and biliary channels causing hypoxia and necrosis
- WHY:
- S/SX of P.A.: jaundice, fatigue, weight loss, RUQ pain, prolonged bleeding
- WHY NOT:
- S/SX affiliated with cirrhosis: asymptomatic or progression of disease- ascites, portal hypertension, hepatic encephalopathy, esophageal varices with GI bleeding, palmar erythema, spider angiomata
- *diagnosed by physical exam & biopsy
(McCance & Huether, 2019)
https://depositphotos.com/248659500/stock-illustration-vector-poster-liver-cirrhosis-symptoms.html
Liver Cancer- Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC)
-
- Commonly a result of cirrhosis, chronic hepatitis B/C due to increased hepatocyte proliferation, epigenetic modifications (carcinogenesis)
- WHY:
- S/SX of P.A.: vague or dull RUQ abdominal pain, jaundice, lack of appetite, prolonged bleeding
-
- WHY NOT:
- S/SX affiliated with HCC: portal hypertension, ascites, GI bleeding
- *diagnosed by physical exam, s/sx, labs, imaging (US)- no biopsy!
- WHY NOT:
(McCance & Huether, 2019)