30 April 2010

Renal Replacement Therapy



Renal Replacement Therapy
Trauma Conference
By:Amanda Wheeler, MD

Principles
4 Main Modalities in ICU
* HD
* PD
* CVVH
* CVVHD

Definition of Terms
* SCUF- Slow Continuous Ultrafiltration
* CAVH- Continuous Arteriovenous Hemofiltration
* CAVH-D- Continuous Arteriovenous Hemofiltration with Dialysis
* CVVH- Continuous Venovenous Hemofiltration
* CVVH-D- Continuous Venovenous Hemofiltration with Dialysis

Indications for Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy
* Volume Overload
* Electrolyte Imbalance
* Uremia
* Acid-Base Disturbances
* Drugs

Hemodialysis vs Hemofiltration Membrane
The hemofiltration membrane consists of relatively straight channels of ever-increasing diameter that offer little resistance to fluid flow.
Hemodialysis membranes contain long, tortuous inter-connecting channels that result in high resistance to fluid flow.
Hemodialysis allows the removal of water and solutes by diffusion across a concentration gradient.

Hemodialysis
* maximum solute clearance
* best tx for severe hyper-K+
* ready availability
* limited anti-coagulation time
* bedside vascular access
* hemodynamic instability
* hypoxemia
* rapid fluid + solute shifts
* complex equipment
* specialized personnel

advantages
disadvantages

Peritoneal Dialysis
* simple to set up + perform
* easy to use
* hemodynamic stability
* no anti-coagulation
* bedside peritoneal access
* unreliable ultrafiltration
* slow fluid + solute removal
* drainage failure, leakage
* catheter obstruction
* respiratory compromise
* hyperglycemia
* peritonitis

advantages
disadvantages

CVVHD vs CVVH
CVVH
* 1. near-complete control of the rate of fluid removal (i.e. the ultrafiltration rate)
* 2. precision and stability
* 3. electrolytes or any formed element of the circulation, including platelets or red or white blood cells, can be removed or added independent of changes in the volume of total body water

CVVH
* easy to use in ICU
* rapid electrolyte correction
* excellent solute clearances
* rapid acid/base correction
* controllable fluid balance
* tolerated by unstable patients
* early use of TPN
* bedside vascular access routine
* systemic anticoagulation *
* citrate anticoagulation new
* frequent filter clotting
* hypotension

advantages
disadvantages

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29 April 2010

Bacteria Pathogenicity Ability to Cause Infection



Bacteria Pathogenicity Ability to Cause Infection

Infectious Diseases
* Encounter-bug meets host (reservoir)
* Bug adheres to host
* Entry-bug enters host
* Multiplication- bug multiplies in host
* Damage to host
* Outcome- bug or host wins or
* Coexist- chronic infection

Reservoir
* Exposure to microbe
Virulence Factors
Adherence
* Prevent infection
* Influenza changes adhesions over time
* Neisseria gonorrhoeae -variety of adhesions

Portals of Entry
* Mucous membranes
* Conjunctiva
* Skin
* Bugs have preferred portal
* C. tetani spores in soil --- anaerobic wound

Inoculum

* Number of microbes-dose
* Greater dose, more chance infection will occur
* ID50 or LD50 expresses virulence

Invasins
* Adherence of microbe to surface
* Activates factors that let microbe in-penetration
* Microbes produce invasins (proteins)
* Endocytosis
* Requires multiplication
* Compete with normal flora for space & nutrients
* Overcome local host defenses
* Avoid IgA

Multiplication
* Need Fe to multiply
Avoid Phagocytosis
* Components of cell wall –virulence
Surviving Within Phagocyte

Tuberculosis
* Ancient disease
* 1/3 of world population infected
* 8 million develop active TB each year
* 2 million die each year
* AIDs increases activation of latent TB
* Dependent upon virulence of strain & host resistance
* Produces cell mediated immunity which prevents active disease in many people
* Multi drug resistance has developed

S & S of Pulmonary TB
* Chronic disease
* Progressive weight loss
* Night sweats
* Chronic cough
* Hemoptysis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
* Acid fast bacillus (AFB)
* Resistant to drying
* Aerobic, slow growth
* Airborne transmission
* Inhale airborne droplets
* Ingested by alveolar macrophages
* Multiply in macrophages even with ongoing immune response

TB Response
* Host immune response-delayed type hypersensitivity reaction
* Tissue damage DT Inflammatory response
TB Conversion
* TST skin reaction is positive
* Occurs within 24 – 48 hours after exposure to TB antigens
* Purified protein derivative of bacillus
* Cell mediated immunity
* Sensitized T cells react with proteins
QuantiferonGold
* Blood test
* Detects interferon gamma

How to Confirm Diagnosis
* Sputum cultures for AFB smear & culture
* Chest xray
Pathogenesis
* LTBI (latent TB infection)
Active Disease

* Low resistance

TB Outcomes
* Primary infection- positive skin test
* 10% progressive primary infection-not controlled
Secondary or Reactivation Infection
* Reinfection-2nd exposure or
* Bacteria escape immune system-reactivation
* Activated macrophages release cytokines
* Delayed hypersensitivity reaction

Prevention of Transmission
* Negative pressure rooms
* Respirator masks-fit tested
* Admit staff aware of symptoms of TB
* Yearly TST of staff
* Conversions treated with 6-9 months of INH

Treatment
* INH for LTBI or TB conversion
* TB disease-active TB
* 9- 12 months of treatment
Resistant TB
* MDR TB
* XDR TB
* DT improper treatment

BCG
* Live culture of M. bovis
Latent vs Active
* Latent TB
* Active TB
Leprosy
* Hanson’s disease- discovered in 1873
* Seen in tropics and underserved countries
* U.S.-150 new cases per year
* Infection of nervous system
* Infects the peripheral nerves within skin
* 2 forms of disease dependent upon immune response

M. leprae
* Tuberculoid form
Lepromatous Form
* Weak immune response & microbe spreads
* Skin & nerve cells infected
* Shed large #s in nasal secretions and oozing sores-more infectious
Invasion via Enzymes
Kinases
Enzymes
Invasion via Toxins
Exotoxins
A-B Toxins
Superantigens
Naming of Exotoxins
Endotoxin
S & S
Shock
Staphylococci
S. aureus
Successful Pathogen
Biofilm
Capsule
Skin Infections
Invasion via Toxins
Toxic shock syndrome
S. aureus Intoxication
Treatment
CA-MRSA
Outbreaks in Community
PVL Gene
Preventing Transmission
Clostridium botulinum
Neurotoxin
Botulism-Foodborne Disease
Toxin
Clostridium tetani
Neurotoxin
Lockjaw
Clostridium difficile
Epidemiology
Range of Disease
Pathogenesis of CDI
New Issues
Treatment
Transmission
Environment

* Clean and disinfect surfaces in close proximity of the patient
* Patient care equipment.
* Use bleach for C. difficile
* Privacy drapes

Bacteria Pathogenicity Ability to Cause Infection.ppt

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Microbial Interactions with Humans



Microbial Interactions with Humans

Types of Interactions: Symbiosis
* Symbiotic Relationships

Overview of Human-Microbial Interactions
* Pathogens
* Pathogenicity
* Virulence
* Opportunistic Pathogen

Infection Versus Disease
* Infection
* Disease

Opportunistic Pathogens
* Don’t normally cause disease, but may under some circumstances
* 3 circumstances for gaining control/disease

Types of Interactions:
Normal Flora
* Normal Flora
* Factors that influence normal flora

Normal Flora
* Hundreds of different niches associated with human
* Some normal flora are pathogenic
* Resident versus transient flora
* Considered part of the first line of defense!
* Microbial antagonism
* Competitive exclusion

Portals of Entry
* Skin
* Mucous membranes

Preferred Portal
* Many microorganisms have to enter in a specific way and in a certain place to cause disease.
* Skin Portal

Skin
* Epidermis and Keratin
* Hair often deters microbial contact with skin
* Dermis and subcutaneous tissue
* Apocrine and sebaceous glands
* Eccrine glands (sweat)

Skin as a Barrier
Mucous Membranes
* Found in mouth, pharynx, esophagus, GI, respiratory, and urinary tracts
* Epithelial cells coated with protective glycoprotein layer (mucous)
* Less protection than skin
* Cilia and mucous produced by goblet cells

Mucous Membranes
* Respiratory tract Portal
* Respiratory Normal Flora
* Respiratory Barrier Mechanisms
* Gastrointestinal tract portal
* GI Normal Flora

Gastrointestinal Tract
* Large intestine
* GI Barrier
* Genitourinary tract Portal
* Genitourinary Tract Normal Flora
* Genitourinary Tract Barrier

LD50 and ID50
* LD50: Number of microbes in a dose that kill 50% of the organisms infected in a sample
* ID50: Number of microbes in a dose that causes disease in 50% of the organisms infected
* The higher the virulence the lower the ID50 or LD50

Microbial Virulence
Microbe Versus Host
* To cause disease a microbe must…
* Why it is difficult for microbes…
o Skin, antimicrobial sweat
Microorganisms and Mechanisms of Pathogenesis

Line of Defense
* First line: Skin and mucous membranes, normal flora
* Second line: phagocytes, inflammation, fever and antimicrobial substances
* Third line: (specific response) special lymphocytes (B and T cells) and antibodies

Step One: Adherence
* Specific adherence
* Pathogens have attachment structures
* Pathogens have attachment structures

Step 2: Invasion/Colonization
* Increase in numbers beyond the point of attachment.
* Three goals

Step 2: Invasion/Colonization
* Localized versus Systematic infections
* Bacteremia, viremia, toxemia
* Septicemia

Step 3: Cause Damage
* Virulence
* Three Ways to cause damage

Virulence Factors
* Usually help organism colonize and grow
* Coagulase
* Siderophores
* Collagenase
* Protease

Another Way to Classify Exotoxins
* Descriptive classifications
A-B toxin
* Cholera toxin (Vibrio cholera)—cholera

The Action of Chlorea Enterotoxin
More A-B toxin examples
Botulinum Toxin
Tetanus Toxin
Membrane Disrupting Toxins
Superantigens
Endotoxins
* Gram type negatives
* Part of outer portion of cell wall (outer membrane)
* Lipid A portion
* Exert effects when G- microbe lyses
* Same symptoms for different species of microbe
* No antitoxins produced by host
* Very stable—can’t destroy easily
* Rarely fatal
* Disseminated intravascular clotting
* General symptoms

Pyrogenic Response
* Macrophage ingestion
* Release of interleukin-1 in bloodstream
* Interleukin-1 to hypothalamus and production of prostaglandins
* Resetting of bodies thermostat

Susceptibility/Resistance of Host
* Species specificity
* Tissue specificity
* Age
* Stress
* Diet
* Pre-existing disease (Genetic and Infectious)
* Gender
* Behavior
* Weather?
* Your first line of defense—Review this

Microbial Interactions with Humans.ppt

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21 April 2010

Lipids



Lipids
By: Henry Wormser, Ph.D.

Introduction
* Definition: water insoluble compounds
+ Most lipids are fatty acids or ester of fatty acid
+ They are soluble in non-polar solvents such as petroleum ether, benzene, chloroform
* Functions
+ Energy storage
+ Structure of cell membranes
+ Thermal blanket and cushion
+ Precursors of hormones (steroids and prostaglandins)
* Types:
+ Fatty acids
+ Neutral lipids
+ Phospholipids and other lipids
Fatty acids
* Carboxylic acid derivatives of long chain hydrocarbons
o Nomenclature (somewhat confusing)
+ Stearate – stearic acid – C18:0 – n-octadecanoic acid
o General structure:
* Common fatty acids
n = 4 butyric acid (butanoic acid)
n = 6 caproic acid (hexanoic acid)
n = 8 caprylic acid (octanoic acid)
n = 10 capric acid (decanoic acid)
* common FA’s:

n = 12: lauric acid (n-dodecanoic acid; C12:0)
n = 14: myristic acid (n-tetradecanoic acid; C14:0)
n = 16: palmitic acid (n-hexadecanoic acid; C16:0)
n = 18; stearic acid (n-octadecanoic acid; C18:0)
n = 20; arachidic (eicosanoic acid; C20:0)
n= 22; behenic acid
n = 24; lignoceric acid
n = 26; cerotic acid

Less common fatty acids
* iso – isobutyric acid
* anteiso
* odd carbon fatty acid – propionic acid
* hydroxy fatty acids – ricinoleic acid, dihydroxystearic acid, cerebronic acid
* cyclic fatty acids – hydnocarpic, chaulmoogric acid

PHYTANIC ACID
A plant derived fatty acid with 16 carbons and branches at C 3, C7, C11 and C15. Present in dairy products and ruminant fats.
A peroxisome responsible for the metabolism of phytanic acid is defective in some individuals. This leads to a disease called Refsum’s disease
Refsum’s disease is characterized by peripheral polyneuropathy, cerebellar ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa
Less common fatty acids
These are alkyne fatty acids
Fatty acids
* Fatty acids can be classified either as:
o saturated or unsaturated
o according to chain length:
Unsaturated fatty acids
* Monoenoic acid (monounsaturated)
Double bond is always cis in natural fatty acids.
This lowers the melting point due to “kink” in the chain
* Dienoic acid: linoleic acid
* Various conventions are in use for indicating the number and position of the double bond(s)
* Polyenoic acid (polyunsaturated)
* Monoenoic acids (one double bond):
* Trienoic acids (3 double bonds)
* Tetraenoic acids (4 double bonds)
* Pentaenoic acid (5 double bonds)
* Hexaenoic acid (6 double bonds)
Both FAs are found in cold water fish oils
Typical fish oil supplements
Properties of fats and oils
* fats are solids or semi solids
* oils are liquids
* melting points and boiling points are not usually sharp (most fats/oils are mixtures)
* when shaken with water, oils tend to emulsify
* pure fats and oils are colorless and odorless (color and odor is always a result of contaminants) – i.e. butter (bacteria give flavor, carotene gives color)
Examples of oils
* Olive oil – from Oleo europa (olive tree)
* Corn oil – from Zea mays
* Peanut oil – from Arachis hypogaea
* Cottonseed oil – from Gossypium
* Sesame oil – from Sesamum indicum
* Linseed oil – from Linum usitatissimum
* Sunflower seed oil – from Helianthus annuus
* Rapeseed oil – from Brassica rapa
* Coconut oil – from Cocos nucifera.....


Websites on lipids

* http://www.cyberlipid.org/ web site deals mainly with an overview on all lipids
* http://www.lipidsonline.org – this website focuses mainly on disease processes (atherosclerosis) and treatment
* http://www.lipidlibrary.co.uk/ -There are two main divisions in this website, one dealing with the chemistry and biochemistry of lipids and the other with the analysis of lipids


Lipids.ppt

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Inborn Errors of Metabolism



Inborn Errors of Metabolism
By:Namrata Singh M.D

Introduction to IEM
* Usually a single gene defect that causes a block in metabolic pathways.
* Problems are because of accumulation of enzyme substrate behind the metabolic block or deficiency of the reaction product.
* In some instances the substrate is diffusible & affects distant organs & in some there is just a local effect ( lysosomal storage disease ).
* Clinical presentation is varied  mild to severe forms ( mutations even in the same gene may be different in different people ).
* Can present at any time.
* Can affect any organ system.

IEM General approach
* DIAGNOSIS : Some clinical presentations:-
o Consider in DDx . when dealing with :-
+ Critically ill infant
+ Seizures
+ Encephalopathy (Reyes like syndrome )
+ Liver disease
+ MR or developmental delay or regression
+ Recurrent vomiting
+ Unusual odor
+ Unexplained acidosis
+ Hyperammonemia
+ hypoglycemia
* Some clues to look for :-
o *Symptoms accompany changes in diet.
o *Developmental regression.
o *History of food preferences or aversions.
o *History of consanguinity in parents.
o *Family history of MR , unexplained deaths in cousins or siblings etc.
* Physical exam:- common findings—
o Alopecia or abnormal hair
o Retinal cherry red spot
o Cataracts or corneal opacities
o Hepatosplenomegaly
o Coarse features
o Skeletal changes ( gibbus)
o Ataxia
o FTT
o Micro or macrocephaly
o Rash / jaundice /hypo or hypertonia
* Lab tests:- almost always needed—
o Serum electrolytes
o Ph ( anion gap & acidosis )
o Se lactate
o Se pyruvate
o Ammonia
o Serum & urine amino acids
o Urine organic acids
o DNA probes
o Glycine in CSF (glycine encephalopathy)
o Urine ketones
+ If + in neonates  IEM
+ If – in older child  IEM ( defect in f.a. oxidation )

IEM – Clinical situations
* MR or dev delay
o Can occur alone.
o Seen in urea cycle ,a.a disorders.
o Also in organic acidemias ,peroxisomal & lysosomal storage disorders.
o Serum & urine a.a .
o Urine for mucopolysacchiduria.
* Ill neonate :-
o Clinically indistinguishable from sepsis.
o Usually disorders of protein & CHO metabolism.
o Acidosis or altered mental status out of proportion to systemic symptoms.
o Labs:
+ Lytes , NH3, gluc , ketones , urine ph ,glycine in CSF.
+ Se & urine for a.a & o.a (* before oral intake is stopped or pt is transfused)

IEM – Clinical situations
* Vomiting & encephalopathy :-
* Hypoglycemia :-
o Seen in fatty acid oxid defects ,glycogen storage diseases ,hereditary fructose intolerance & organic acidemias.
o Other labs:-
Urine ketones ~(+) in GSD & organic acidemias. ~(-) in HFI & f.a. oxidation disorders
o Other labs:-
+ NH3 elevated in organic acidemias & fatty acid oxidation defects.
+ Urine reducing subst.– (+) in galactosemia ,HFI.
+ Urine organic acids
* Hyperammonemia :-
o initially – poor appetite , irritability . Then , vomiting , lethargy , seizures & coma.
o Tachypnea – direct effect on resp. drive.
o Seen in (1)- urea cycle disorders (2)- organic acidemias (3)- transient hyperammonemia of the newborn.
o Resp alkalosis : urea cycle disorders & transient hyperammonemia of newborn.
o Acidosis : organic acidemias

RESP ALKALOSIS
ACIDOSIS
UREA CYCLE DEFECTS
TRANSIENT HYPERAMMONEMIA OF NEWBORN
ORGANIC ACIDEMIAS
SE CITRULLINE—LOW– EARLY UREA CYCLE DEFECT
SLIGHTLY ELEV– TRANSIENT HYPERAMMONEMIA OF NB
MARKEDLY ELEV– CITRULLINEMIA & ARGINOSUCCINIC ACIDEMIA
* Acidosis :-
o With recurrent vomiting.
o With elevated NH3.
o Out of proportion to clinical picture.
o Difficult to correct.
o Seen in organic acidemias , MSUD ,GSD , disorders of gluconeogenesis.
o Increased anion gap (ketoacids ,lactic acid , methylmalonic acid.)

* Acidosis :- additional tests—
o Se glucose
o NH3
o Urine pH
o Ketones
o Amino & organic acids
o Blood lactate & pyruvate
* Lactate & pyruvate—
o Measure in arterial blood.
o Normal Ratio is 10:1 to 20:1.
o High ratio
+ Mitochondrial disorders.
+ Pyruvate carboxylase deficiency.
o Normal or low ratio
+ Glycogen storage disease.
+ Pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
* Broad management :-
o Problems severe acidosis , hypoglycemia , hyperammonemia . Can lead to coma & death!
o Stop all oral intake.
o Give I/V glucose to stop catabolism.( most respond favorably to glucose – some do not eg. Primary lactic acidosis in pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency .)
o Bicarb.
o Hyperammonemia – may need dialysis .
* Specific interventions :-
o Urea cycle disorders-
+ * preventing protein catabolism ( high calorie diet , arginine supplementation )
+ * decreasing NH3 load (protein restriction )
+ * utilizing NH3 scavengers ( benzoate ,phenylbutyrate)
o PKU-
+ *Avoid enzyme substrate in diet.
+ *Diet low in phenylalanine ( Lofenelac , Phenylfree, Analog XP , Maxamaid XP )
+ *Protein restriction.
o Galactosemia-
+ *galactose free diet ( soy formulas contain sucrose rather than lactose )
o Isovaleric acidemia-
+ Pharmacotherapy to remove accumulated substrate –( glycine treatment).
o Methylmalonic acidemia-
+ Provide co-enzyme ( vit B12)
o Gauchers disease-
+ Provide normal enzyme (enzyme infusions)

IEM Some associations
INITIAL FINDINGS ( POOR FEEDING , VOMITING , LETHARGY, CONVULSIONS ,COMA )
METABOLIC DISORDER
INFECTION
OBTAIN PL. NH3
HIGH NORMAL
OBTAIN BLOOD Ph & CO2
ACIDOSIS
NORMAL
UREA CYCLE DEFECTS
ORGANIC ACIDEMIAS
AMINOACIDOPATHIES
GALACTOSEMIA

Inborn Errors of Metabolism.ppt

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Complex Carbohydrates



Complex Carbohydrates

- Know the structural components and differences between the glycoconjugate types
- Know the general biosynthetic and catabolic strategies and molecules involved
- Know the general function of each class of glycoconjugate
- Know the general biochemical principles associated with diseases resulting from defects in the catabolic pathways of the glycoconjugates

* Marks, Marks and Smith Chapter 30, primary source, Harper’s Ch 56 supersecondary source. Review Ch. 15,16 for sugar and lipid structural properties

General Biosynthetic and Catabolic Themes for Glycoconjugates
* An initial sugar residue is attached to a core protein or lipid, usually through a serine or asparagine residue.
* Sugar residues are added sequentially from nucleotide diphosphate sugar donors by specific glycosyltransferases in the endoplasmic reticulum and golgi.
* Glycosidases (sugar specific hydrolases) in the lysosome are responsible for degradation and catabolism
* Almost all diseases related to glycoconjugates result from defective lysosomal glycosidase function

UDP-Glucose Glycosyltranserase Reaction
Sugar Nucleotide Conversions
Proteoglycans
* Consist of a core protein, that is either transmembranous or secreted. Via serine residues, long, unbranched, repeating disaccharides of uronic acid (glucuronic or iduronic) and hexosamine (N-acetylglucosamine or N-acetylgalactosamine) are covalently attached to the protein on the (on the extracellular surface if membrane attached).
* These residues are frequently sulfated following polymer formation. Thus they possess a large net negative charge, are highly hydrated, and occupy a large amount of space extracellularly (good for their role as lubricants and molecular sieves). They also provide a large surface area for binding of other matrix components and some growth factors.
* Major components of the extracellular matrix, also in joint synovial fluid, vitreous humor of the eye, arterial walls, bone and cartilage

The main classes of disaccharide repeats found in glycosaminoglycans attached to protein
GAG-Carbohydrate Core Linkage to Protein

Sequential Biosynthetic Pathway for GAGs
Glycoproteins
There are three major classes of glycoproteins – those with carbohydrate chains that are N-linked (via an Asn), O-linked (via Ser or Thr) or linked via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) lipid. These are primarily transmembranous proteins with the carbohydrates positioned extracellularly, and they are also secreted.

* For N-linked, the carbohydrate core structure is synthesized processively on an activated lipid carrier, dolichol phosphate, and transferred co-translationally to membrane proteins synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum.

Three Main Types of Glycoprotein Structures
O-linked
N-linked
GPI-linked
GPI = glycosylphosphatidylinositol
Also: targeting signal for removal of damaged or mis-folded proteins from the cell
And: generally function to aid in the proper conformation and stability of membrane-associated proteins
Dolichol-linked Donor Oligosaccharide Synthesis for N-linked Glycoproteins
O-linked Glycoproteins (Mucins most common)
Glycolipids
* Carbohydrates are attached to ceramide (a sphingolipid: sphingosine plus fatty acid). Involved in cell-cell contact/interactions. The terminal carbohydrates can frequently be identical to carbohydrate chains on glycoproteins (Ex: blood group antigens)
* Cerebrosides – glycolipids with one or two sugars (glucose and galactose); if sulfated, are termed sulfatides, found in high concentrations in the brain
* Gangliosides – glycolipids that contain sialic acid residues, longer and branched relative to cerebrosides

Glycolipid Structural
Components
Sulfate donor
R = protein or ceramide
Bacteria sp. with binding proteins (lectins) for Lactosylceramide
I-Cell Disease Summary
Tay-Sachs Disease (Ex.)
* The most common form of GM2 gangliosidosis; the GM2 ganglioside accumulates due to a defect in hexosaminidase A. Causes swelling and loss of ganglion cells in the cerebral cortex, proliferation of glial cells, and demyelination of peripheral nerves.
* Rare defect in general population, but occurs 1 in every 3600 births in the U.S. Jewish population descended from Eastern Europe (ex: 1 in 28 Ashkenazi Jews carry the defect).
* No effective treatments; genetic counseling and screening are the primary approaches used to minimize occurrence.

Complex Carbohydrates

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Sphingolipid Disorders



Sphingolipid Disorders
by:Eric Niederhoffer
SIU-SOM

Sphingolipids (phospho- or glycolipids)

General Structure
Gangliosidoses
Generalized gangliosidosis
Tay-Sachs disease
Niemann-Pick disease
Metachromatic leukodystrophy
Krabbe’s disease
Gaucher’s disease
b-galactosidase
b-hexosaminidase A
GM2 activator
neuraminidase
(sialidase)
SAP-B
b-galactosidase
SAP-B, SAP-C
b-glucosylceramidase
SAP-C
b-hexosaminidase A&B
a-galactosidase A
SAP-B
sphingomyelinase
arylsulfatase A
SAP-B
b-galactosylceramidase
SAP-A, SAP-C
Cerezyme
Targeting of Lysosomal Enzymes to Lysosomes
Addition of M6P to lysosomal enzymes
Recognition by MPRs
M6P independent pathways

Review Questions

* How do you interpret ganglioside names (G, D, M, 1, 2, 3)?
* What do the different lysosomal enzyme names mean in the context of removing saccharides?
* Where does ganglioside degradation occur?

Sphingolipid Disorders

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11 April 2010

Infectious Diseases of the Respiratory System



Infectious Diseases of the Respiratory System

Infections of the Respiratory tract
* Most common entry point for infections
* Upper respiratory tract
* Lower respiratory tract


Protective Mechanisms
Normal flora: Commensal organisms
* Limited to the upper tract
* Mostly Gram positive or anaeorbic
* Microbial antagonist (competition)

Other Protective Mechanisms
* Nasal hair, nasal turbinates
* Mucus
* Involuntary responses (coughing)
* Secretory IgA
* Immune cells

Selected Bacterial Infections

Pharyngitis
Pneumonia - Streptococcus pneumoniae
Diphtheria - Corynebacterium diphtheriae
Tuberculosis - Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Whooping cough - Bordetella pertussis
Streptococcus pyogenes
Group A Strep
Strep Throat
Scarlet Fever
Bacterial Pneumonia
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Bacterial Pneumonia
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Diphtheria
* Transmitted by droplets or fomites
* Infects the upper respiratory tract
* Begins with severe sore throat, low-grade fever and swollen lymph nodes or with skin rash, 1-6 days after infection

Corynebacterium diphtheriae
* Aerobic Gram + bacillus
* Toxin inhibits protein synthesis of cells to which it binds
* Destroyed cells and WBC form "pseudomembrane" which blocks airways
Bordetella pertussis
Pertussis (Whooping Cough)
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Tubercule formation
Tuberculosis
Multi-Drug Resistant
TB Skin Test
Virus infections
Fungal Infections
Respiratory Syncytial Virus
* Enveloped (membrane) RNA virus
* Spread by respiratory droplets
* Community outbreaks in late fall to spring
* Upper respiratory tract infection – epithelial cells
* May be fatal in infants
Influenza Virus
An enveloped RNA virus
Coccidioides immitis
Valley Fever is an Endemic Disease
Coccidioides immitis

Infectious Diseases of the Respiratory System.ppt

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Anatomy of Respiratory System



Anatomy of Respiratory System

Organization and Functions of the Respiratory System
* Consists of an upper respiratory tract (nose to larynx) and a lower respiratory tract ( trachea onwards) .
* Conducting portion transports air.
- includes the nose, nasal cavity, pharynx, larynx, trachea, and progressively smaller airways, from the primary bronchi to the terminal bronchioles

* Respiratory portion carries out gas exchange.
- composed of small airways called respiratory bronchioles and alveolar ducts as well as air sacs called alveoli

Respiratory System Functions
* supplies the body with oxygen and disposes of carbon dioxide
* filters inspired air
* produces sound
* contains receptors for smell
* rids the body of some excess water and heat
* helps regulate blood pH

Breathing
* Breathing (pulmonary ventilation). consists of two cyclic phases:
* inhalation, also called inspiration - draws gases into the lungs.
* exhalation, also called expiration - forces gases out of the lungs.

Upper Respiratory Tract
* Composed of the nose and nasal cavity, paranasal sinuses, pharynx (throat), larynx.
* All part of the conducting portion of the respiratory system.
Respiratory mucosa
* A layer of pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelial cells that secrete mucus
* Found in nose, sinuses, pharynx, larynx and trachea
* Mucus can trap contaminants
o Cilia move mucus up towards mouth

Upper Respiratory Tract

Nose
* Internal nares - opening to exterior
* External nares opening to pharynx
* Nasal conchae - folds in the mucous membrane that increase air turbulence and ensures that most air contacts the mucous membranes

Nose
* rich supply of capillaries warm the inspired air
* olfactory mucosa – mucous membranes that contain smell receptors
* respiratory mucosa – pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium containing goblet cells that secrete mucus which traps inhaled particles,
* lysozyme kills bacteria and lymphocytes and
* IgA antibodies that protect against bacteria

provides and airway for respiration
• moistens and warms entering air
• filters and cleans inspired air
• resonating chamber for speech
detects odors in the air stream
rhinoplasty: surgery to change shape of external nose

Paranasal Sinuses
* Four bones of the skull contain paired air spaces called the paranasal sinuses - frontal, ethmoidal, sphenoidal, maxillary
* Decrease skull bone weight
* Warm, moisten and filter incoming air
* Add resonance to voice.
* Communicate with the nasal cavity by ducts.
* Lined by pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium.

Paranasal sinuses

Pharynx
* Common space used by both the respiratory and digestive systems.
* Commonly called the throat.
* Originates posterior to the nasal and oral cavities and extends inferiorly near the level of the bifurcation of the larynx and esophagus.
* Common pathway for both air and food.
* Walls are lined by a mucosa and contain skeletal muscles that are primarily used for swallowing.
* Flexible lateral walls are distensible in order to force swallowed food into the esophagus.
* Partitioned into three adjoining regions:

nasopharynx
oropharynx
laryngopharynx
Nasopharynx
* Superior-most region of the pharynx. Covered with pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium.
* Located directly posterior to the nasal cavity and superior to the soft palate, which separates the oral cavity.
* Normally, only air passes through.
* Material from the oral cavity and oropharynx is typically blocked from entering the nasopharynx by the uvula of soft palate, which elevates when we swallow.
* In the lateral walls of the nasopharynx, paired auditory/eustachian tubes connect the nasopharynx to the middle ear.
* Posterior nasopharynx wall also houses a single pharyngeal tonsil (commonly called the adenoids).


Oropharynx
* The middle pharyngeal region.
* Immediately posterior to the oral cavity.
* Bounded by the edge of the soft palate superiorly and the hyoid bone inferiorly.
* Common respiratory and digestive pathway through which both air and swallowed food and drink pass.
* Contains nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelim.
* Lymphatic organs here provide the first line of defense against ingested or inhaled foreign materials. Palatine tonsils are on the lateral wall between the arches, and the lingual tonsils are at the base of the tongue.

Laryngopharynx
* Inferior, narrowed region of the pharynx.
* Extends inferiorly from the hyoid bone to the larynx and esophagus.
* Terminates at the superior border of the esophagus and the epiglottis of the larynx.
* Lined with a nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium.
* Permits passage of both food and air.

Lower Respiratory Tract
* Conducting airways (trachea, bronchi, up to terminal bronchioles).
* Respiratory portion of the respiratory system (respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, and alveoli).
Larynx
* Voice box is a short, somewhat cylindrical airway ends in the trachea.
* Prevents swallowed materials from entering the lower respiratory tract.
* Conducts air into the lower respiratory tract.
* Produces sounds.
* Supported by a framework of nine pieces of cartilage (three individual pieces and three cartilage pairs) that are held in place by ligaments and muscles.
* Nine c-rings of cartilage form the framework of the larynx
* thyroid cartilage – (1) Adam’s apple, hyaline, anterior attachment of vocal folds, testosterone increases size after puberty
* cricoid cartilage – (1) ring-shaped, hyaline
* arytenoid cartilages – (2) hyaline, posterior attachment of vocal folds, hyaline
* cuneiform cartilages - (2) hyaline
* corniculate cartlages - (2) hyaline

epiglottis – (1) elastic cartilage
* Muscular walls aid in voice production and the swallowing reflex
* Glottis – the superior opening of the larynx
* Epiglottis – prevents food and drink from entering airway when swallowing
* pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium

Sound Production
* Inferior ligaments are called the vocal folds.
- are true vocal cords because they produce sound when air passes between them
* Superior ligaments are called the vestibular folds.
- are false vocal cords because they have no function in sound production, but protect the vocal folds.

* The tension, length, and position of the vocal folds determine the quality of the sound.

Sound production
* Intermittent release of exhaled air through the vocal folds
* Loudness – depends on the force with which air is exhaled through the cords
* Pharynx, oral cavity, nasal cavity, paranasal sinuses act as resonating chambers that add quality to the sound
* Muscles of the face, tongue, and lips help with enunciation of words

Conducting zone of lower respiratory tract
Trachea
* A flexible tube also called windpipe.
* Extends through the mediastinum and lies anterior to the esophagus and inferior to the larynx.
* Anterior and lateral walls of the trachea supported by 15 to 20 C-shaped tracheal cartilages.
* Cartilage rings reinforce and provide rigidity to the tracheal wall to ensure that the trachea remains open at all times
* Posterior part of tube lined by trachealis muscle
* Lined by ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium.
Trachea
* At the level of the sternal angle, the trachea bifurcates into two smaller tubes, called the right and left primary bronchi.
* Each primary bronchus projects laterally toward each lung.
* The most inferior tracheal cartilage separates the primary bronchi at their origin and forms an internal ridge called the carina.
Bronchial tree
* A highly branched system of air-conducting passages that originate from the left and right primary bronchi.
* Progressively branch into narrower tubes as they diverge throughout the lungs before terminating in terminal bronchioles.
* Incomplete rings of hyaline cartilage support the walls of the primary bronchi to ensure that they remain open.
* Right primary bronchus is shorter, wider, and more vertically oriented than the left primary bronchus.
* Foreign particles are more likely to lodge in the right primary bronchus.
* The primary bronchi enter the hilus of each lung together with the pulmonary vessels, lymphatic vessels, and nerves.
* Each primary bronchus branches into several secondary bronchi (or lobar bronchi).
* The left lung has two secondary bronchi.The right lung has three secondary bronchi.
* They further divide into tertiary bronchi.
* Each tertiary bronchus is called a segmental bronchus because it supplies a part of the lung called a bronchopulmonary segment.
* Secondary bronchi tertiary bronchi bronchioles terminal bronchioles
* with successive branching amount of cartilage decreases and amount of smooth muscle increases, this allows for variation in airway diameter
* during exertion and when sympathetic division active bronchodilation
* mediators of allergic reactions like histamine bronchoconstriction
* epithelium gradually changes from ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium to simple cuboidal epithelium in terminal bronchioles

Respiratory Zone of Lower Respiratory Tract
Conduction vs. Respiratory zones
* Most of the tubing in the lungs makes up conduction zone
o Consists of nasal cavity to terminal bronchioles
* The respiratory zone is where gas is exchanged
o Consists of alveoli, alveolar sacs, alveolar ducts and respiratory bronchioles

Respiratory Bronchioles, Alveolar Ducts, and Alveoli
* Lungs contain small saccular outpocketings called alveoli.
* They have a thin wall specialized to promote diffusion of gases between the alveolus and the blood in the pulmonary capillaries.
* Gas exchange can take place in the respiratory bronchioles and alveolar ducts as well as in the alveoli, each lung contains approximately 300 to 400 million alveoli.
* The spongy nature of the lung is due to the packing of millions of alveoli together.

Respiratory Membrane
* squamous cells of alveoli .
* basement membrane of alveoli.
* basement membrane of capillaries
* simple squamous cells of capillaries
* about .5 μ in thickness

Gross Anatomy of the Lungs
* Each lung has a conical shape. Its wide, concave base rests upon the muscular diaphragm.
* Its superior region called the apex projects superiorly to a point that is slightly superior and posterior to the clavicle.
* Both lungs are bordered by the thoracic wall anteriorly, laterally, and posteriorly, and supported by the rib cage.
* Toward the midline, the lungs are separated from each other by the mediastinum.
* The relatively broad, rounded surface in contact with the thoracic wall is called the costal surface of the lung.

Left lung
* divided into 2 lobes by oblique fissure
* smaller than the right lung
* cardiac notch accommodates the heart
Right
* divided into 3 lobes by oblique and horizontal fissure
* located more superiorly in the body due to liver on right side

Pleura and Pleural Cavities
* The outer surface of each lung and the adjacent internal thoracic wall are lined by a serous membrane called pleura.
* The outer surface of each lung is tightly covered by the visceral pleura.
* while the internal thoracic walls, the lateral surfaces of the mediastinum, and the superior surface of the diaphragm are lined by the parietal pleura.
* The parietal and visceral pleural layers are continuous at the hilus of each lung.

Pleural Cavities
The potential space between the serous membrane layers is a pleural cavity.

* The pleural membranes produce a thin, serous pleural fluid that circulates in the pleural cavity and acts as a lubricant, ensuring minimal friction during breathing.
* Pleural effusion – pleuritis with too much fluid
Blood supply of Lungs
* pulmonary circulation -
* bronchial circulation – bronchial arteries supply oxygenated blood to lungs, bronchial veins carry away deoxygenated blood from lung tissue  superior vena cava
* Response of two systems to hypoxia – pulmonary vessels undergo vasoconstriction bronchial vessels like all other systemic vessels undergo vasodilation

Respiratory events
* Pulmonary ventilation = exchange of gases between lungs and atmosphere
* External respiration = exchange of gases between alveoli and pulmonary capillaries
* Internal respiration = exchange of gases between systemic capillaries and tissue cells

Two phases of pulmonary ventilation
* Inspiration, or inhalation - a very active process that requires input of energy.The diaphragm, contracts, moving downward and flattening, when stimulated by phrenic nerves.
* Expiration, or exhalation - a passive process that takes advantage of the recoil properties of elastic fiber. ・The diaphragm relaxes.The elasticity of the lungs and the thoracic cage allows them to return to their normal size and shape.

Muscles that ASSIST with respiration
* The scalenes help increase thoracic cavity dimensions by elevating the first and second ribs during forced inhalation.
* The ribs elevate upon contraction of the external intercostals, thereby increasing the transverse dimensions of the thoracic cavity during inhalation.
* Contraction of the internal intercostals depresses the ribs, but this only occurs during forced exhalation.
* Normal exhalation requires no active muscular effort.

Muscles that ASSIST with respiration
* Other accessory muscles assist with respiratory activities.
* The pectoralis minor, serratus anterior, and sternocleidomastoid help with forced inhalation,
* while the abdominal muscles(external and internal obliques, transversus abdominis, and rectus abdominis) assist in active exhalation.

Boyle’s Law
* The pressure of a gas decreases if the volume of the container increases, and vice versa.
* When the volume of the thoracic cavity increases even slightly during inhalation, the intrapulmonary pressure decreases slightly, and air flows into the lungs through the conducting airways. Air flows into the lungs from a region of higher pressure (the atmosphere)into a region of lower pressure (the intrapulmonary region).
* When the volume of the thoracic cavity decreases during exhalation, the intrapulmonary pressure increases and forces air out of the lungs into the atmosphere.

Ventilation Control by Respiratory Centers of the Brain
* The trachea, bronchial tree, and lungs are innervated by the autonomic nervous system.
* The autonomic nerve fibers that innervate the heart also send branches to the respiratory structures.
* The involuntary, rhythmic activities that deliver and remove respiratory gases are regulated in the brainstem within the reticular formation through both the medulla oblongata and pons.

Respiratory Values
* A normal adult averages 12 breathes per minute = respiratory rate(RR)
* Respiratory volumes – determined by using a spirometer

LUNG VOLUMES
* TIDAL VOLUME (TV): Volume inspired or expired with each normalハbreath. = 500 ml
* INSPIRATORY RESERVE VOLUME (IRV): Maximum volume that can be inspired over the inspiration of a tidal volume/normal breath. Used during exercise/exertion.=3100 ml
* EXPIRATRY RESERVE VOLUME (ERV): Maximal volume that can be expired after the expiration of a tidal volume/normal breath. = 1200 ml
* RESIDUAL VOLUME (RV): Volume that remains in the lungs after a maximal expiration.ハ CANNOT be measured by spirometry.= 1200 ml

LUNG CAPACITIES
* INSPIRATORY CAPACITY ( IC): Volume of maximal inspiration:IRV + TV = 3600 ml
* FUNCTIONAL RESIDUAL CAPACITY (FRC): Volume of gas remaining in lung after normal expiration, cannot be measured by spirometry because it includes residual volume:ERV + RV = 2400 ml
* VITAL CAPACITY (VC): Volume of maximal inspiration and expiration:IRV + TV + ERV = IC + ERV = 4800 ml
* TOTAL LUNG CAPACITY (TLC): The volume of the lung after maximal inspiration.ハ The sum of all four lung volumes, cannot be measured by spirometry because it includes residual volume:IRV+ TV + ERV + RV = IC + FRC = 6000 ml

Anatomy of Respiratory System.ppt

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Upper Respiratory Tract Infections



Upper Respiratory Tract Infections
By:Dr. Meenakshi Aggarwal MD
Emory Family Medicine

Definition

* Inflammation of the respiratory mucosa from the nose to the lower respiratory tree, not including the alveoli.

Objectives
* List the various categories of upper respiratory tract infections
* Obtain a pertinent history in a patient with a suspected URI.
* Perform a targeted and thorough physical examination to confirm the diagnosis of URI.
* Perform and interpret selected tests to diagnose URI
* Manage and treat uncomplicated URI’s.

Categories
* Acute Rhinosinusitis
* Acute Pharyngitis
* Acute Bronchitis

Differential Diagnosis
* Influenza
* Pneumonia
* Tuberculosis
* Asthma

Anatomy of Sinuses
Acute Rhinosinusitis (Viral)
* Common Symptoms: Nasal discharge, nasal congestion, facial pressure, cough, fever, muscle aches, joint pains, sore throat with hoarseness.
* Symptoms resolve in 10-14 days
* Common in fall, winter and spring.
* Treatment: Symptomatic

Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
* Causative agents are usually the normal inhabitants of the respiratory tract.
* Common agents:

Streptococcus pneumoniae
Nontypeable Haemophilus Influenzae

Moraxella Catarrhalis
Signs and Symptoms
* Feeling of fullness and pressure over the involved sinuses, nasal congestion and purulent nasal discharge.
* Other associated symptoms: Sore throat, malaise, low grade fever, headache, toothache, cough > 1 week duration.
* Symptoms may last for more than 10-14 days.

Diagnosis
* Based on clinical signs and symptoms
* Physical Exam: Palpate over the sinuses, look for structural abnormalities like DNS.
* X-ray sinuses: not usually needed but may show cloudiness and air fluid levels
* Limited coronal CT are more sensitive to inflammatory changes and bone destruction

Ethmoid Sinusitis
Coronal computed tomographic scan showing ethmoidal polyps. Ethmoid opacity is total as a result of nasal polyps, with a secondary fluid level in the left maxillary antrum.

Treatment
* About 2/3rd of patients will improve without treatment in 2 weeks.
* Antibiotics: Reserved for patients who have symptoms for more than 10 days or who experience worsening symptoms.
* OTC decongestant nasal sprays should be discouraged for use more than 5 days
* Supportive therapy: Humidification, analgesics, antihistaminics
a) Amoxicillin (500mg TID) OR
b) TMP/SMX ( one DS for 10 days).
c) Alternative antibiotics: High dose amoxi/clavunate, Flouroquinolones, macrolides

Antibiotics
Acute Pharyngitis
* Fewer than 25% of patients with sore throat have true pharyngitis.
* Primarily seen in 5-18 years old. Common in adult women.

Etiology
A) Viral: Most common.
Rhinovirus (most common).
Symptoms usually last for 3-5 days.

B) Bacterial: Group A beta hemolytic streptococcus (GABHS).
Early detection can prevent complications like acute rheumatic fever and post streptococcal GN.

Signs and Symptoms
* Absence of Cough
* Fever
* Sore throat
* Malaise
* Rhinorrhoea
* Classic triad of GABHS: High fever, tonsillar exhudates and ant. cervical lymphadenopathy.

NO COUGH
Diagnosis
* Physical Exam: Tonsillar exhudates, anterior cervical LAD
* Rapid strep: Throat swab. Sensitivity of 80% and specificity of 95%.

Throat Cultures: Not required usually. Needed only when suspicion is high and rapid strep is negative.

Exhudates
Management
A) Symptomatic: Saline gargles,

analgesics, cool-mist humidification and throat lozenges.

B) Antibiotics:
a) Benzathine Pn-G 1.2 million units IM x 1OR Pn V orally for 10 days
b) For Pn allergic pts:Erythromycin 500mg QID x 10 days OR Azithro 500 mg Qdaily x 3 days.

Acute Bronchitis
Inflammation of the bronchial respiratory mucosa leading to productive cough.
Acute Bronchitis
* Etiology: A)Viral
B) Bacterial (Bordetella pertussis, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Chlamydia pneumoniae)
* Diagnosis: Clinical
* S/S: Productive cough, rarely fever or tachypnea.

Treatment
* Symptomatic
* If cough persists for more than 10 days:

Azithro x 5 days OR
Clarithro x 7 days
Non specific URI’s

* Common Cold
* Etiology: Rhinovirus
Adenovirus
RSV
Parainfluenza
Enteroviruses
Diagnosis: Clinical
Treatment: Adequate fluid intake, rest, humidified air, and over-the-counter analgesics and antipyretics.

Influenza
* Etiology: Influenza A & B
* Symptoms: Fever, myalgias, headache, rhinitis, malaise, nonproductive cough, sore throat
* Diagnosis: Influenza A &B antigen testing
* Treatment: Supportive care, oseltamivir, amantidine

Upper Respiratory Tract Infections.ppt

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06 April 2010

Hepatitis A & B



Hepatitis A

The virus that does not cause chronic liver disease

Hepatitis A
* “Infectious Hepatitis”
* First characterized in 1973
* Detected in human feces
* Hepatovirus genus
* A reportable infectious disease
* U.S. rate of infection 4/100,000
* Highest among children

Risk Factors
* Sexual or household contact
* International travel
* Men who have sex w/ men (MSM)
* Intravenous drug abuse (IVDA)
* Daycare

Transmission
* Unwitting contact w/ infected person
* Most cases unknown
* Primary route is fecal oral either by person to person contact or ingestion of contaminated food or water

Pathogenesis
* After ingestion, the HAV survives gastric acid, moves to the small intestine and reaches the liver via the portal vein
* Replicates in hepatocyte cytoplasm
o Not a cytopathic virus
o Immune mediated cell damage more likely
* Once mature the HAV travels through sinusoids and enters bile canaliculi, released into the small intestine and systemic circulation, excreted in feces

Clinical Features
* Incubation is usually 2 to 4 weeks, rarely 6 weeks
* Complete recovery within 2 months for > 50%
* Within 6 months for almost all others
* Low mortality in healthy people
o High mortality when older than age 60
o High in presence of chronic liver disease
* High morbidity
o Around 20% need hospitalization
o Lost work days
o Most become jaundiced
* Asymptomatic < 2 year old * Symptomatic – 5 and older ill about 8 weeks * Cholestatic – jaundice lasts > 10 weeks
* Relapsing w/ 2 or more bouts acute HAV over a 6 to 10 week period
* Acute liver failure – rare in young. When it occurs, is rapid i.e., within 4 weeks

Signs and Symptoms
* Prodrome lasts 1-2 weeks: fatigue, asthenia, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain
* Less common: fever, cephalgia, arthralgia, myalgia, and diarrhea
* Dark urine is followed by jaundice and hepatomegaly
* Less common: splenomegaly, cervical lymphadenopathy

Diagnosis
* During acute infection, anti HAV IgM appears first
* HAV IgG antibody appears early in the course of infection and remains detectable for life, providing lifelong immunity

Prevention Immunization
* All children 12 – 24 months
* Travelers, occupational exposure risk
* All patients w/ hepatitis B or C or those awaiting liver transplantation
* HIV positive patients
* MSM
* IVD users
* People w/ clotting factor deficiencies
* Lab workers handling live hepatitis A vaccine
* Need for post exposure prophylaxis uncommon. Administration of the vaccine is effective. If needed, administer immune serum globulin within 2 weeks 0.02 ml/Kg IM

Hepatitis A Vaccine
* The vaccine is inactivated HAV
* Schedule for 2 – 18 years depends upon the manufacturer:
o Havirx: 720 EL U/.5mL @ 0, 6-12 mo
o Vaqta: 25 U.5mL @ 0, 6-18 mo
* For those over age 18:
o Havirx: 1440 EL U/1mL @ 0, 6-12 mo
o Vaqta: 50 U/1mL @ 0, 6-18 mo
* Adverse effects: rarely anaphylaxis, injection site induration, erythema, edema, fatigue, mild fever, malaise, anorexia, nausea
* Twinrix:
o 720 El U/1mL 0, 1, 6 mo plus
o 20 mcg HBV

Questions?
Hepatitis B
The Virus
* The hepatitis B virus is among the smallest genomes of all known animal viruses
* A DNA virus that infects only humans
* Belongs to the family Hepadnaviridae
* Knowledge of the viral proteins that are perceived by the immune system as “antigens” aids understanding of the various tests used to diagnose acute, chronic, and resolved infection and verify response to immunization

HBV Antigens
* Outer envelope contains a surface protein called hepatitis B surface antigen
* HBsAg is a marker of viral replication
* Inner core contains the genome, the DNA polymerase w/ reverse transcriptase activity, hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) particles. This antigen is not detectable in serum
* A truncated form of the major core polypeptide known as hepatitis e antigen (HBeAg) is the third antigen generated by virus activity. Marker of high infectivity

Hepatitis B Antibodies
* Hepatitis B surface antibody is the antibody to surface antigen. HBsAb is protective and indicates either resolved infection or immunization
* HBcAb is the antibody to core antigen. This is not a protective antibody. Only those who have been exposed to the virus will have this antibody
* HBcAb is measured in serum as:
o Anti HBc IgM (usually indicates new infection)
o Anti HBc IgG (appears later)
* HBeAb is the antibody to e antigen. Loss of e antigen w/ gain of e antibody is called seroconversion. Not a protective antibody

Epidemiology
* Prevalence of HBV varies markedly around the world, w/ > 75% of cases in Asia and the Western Pacific
* Vaccine available > 20 years, but perinatal and early life exposure continue to be a major source of infection in endemic areas
* Most acute HBV cases in the U.S. are seen among young adults, males > females, who use injection drugs and in those who engage in high risk sexual behaviors
* In the U.S., hundreds of people die each year of fulminant HBV
* World wide, chronic HBV and its complications including hepatocellular carcinoma account for > 1 million deaths each year

Risk Factors

* Percutaneous and mucous membrane exposure. The virus is 100 x more infectious than HIV, 10 x more infectious than HCV and is present in all body fluids. Present on horizontal surfaces, eating utensils, personal hygiene items, etc.
* Babies born to infected mother
* Household contact
* Hemodialysis
* Receipt of blood products prior to the early 1970s
* Receipt of previously infected donor liver

Markers of Exposure
* Surface antigen appears as early as 1-2 weeks following exposure, as late as 11-12 weeks
* HBV DNA measurable soon after
* HBeAg appears shortly after HBsAg
* Hepatitis occurs 1 – 7 weeks after appearance of HBsAg

Pathophysiology
* Governed by interaction between the virus and host immune response
* Following inoculation by the HBV, cytokine release, cell injury and viral clearance follow
* HBsAg disappears by six months and is accompanied by sero conversion to protective HBsAb
* Persistent virus replication after six months ->chronic hepatitis and is the result of a compromised (newborn/HIV) or relatively tolerant immune system status

Four Stages of Infection
* Age at time of infection predicts chronicity in most cases. Infants and young children usually become chronically infected. When acquired in adults, the virus is cleared by the healthy immune system in about 95% of cases, leading to natural immunity
* Immune tolerant phase, there is active viral replication. ALT and AST are normal. Immune system does not recognize HBV as “foreign”
* In the immune clearance phase, enzymes rise reflecting immune mediated lysis of infected hepatocytes. This phase can last for years. Seroconversion of HBeAg to HBeAb occurs

Stages of Infection
* Low or non-replicative phase. Also known as inactive carrier (or inappropriately “healthy carrier”). Characterized by resolution of necroinflammation, normalization of enzymes and low levels of HBV DNA. This stage may last for life
* Reactivation. Spontaneous or immunosuppression mediated (cancer chemotherapy or high dose corticosteroid therapy)

Signs and Symptoms
* Incubation period: a few weeks to 6 months
* About 30% develop jaundice
* 10% to 20% of patients develop serum sickness, i.e., fever, arthralgias, rash
* Fulminant hepatitis B occurs in < 1% of cases. 80% mortality without liver transplantation * Enzyme elevations of 1,000-2,000 typical Signs and Symptoms * Fatigue, RUQ discomfort may be the only symptoms * Those in the immune tolerant phase are usually asymptomatic. The phase lasts until late puberty into adulthood Signs of Decompensation * See section on Cirrhosis and Portal Hypertension * Refer to a liver transplantation center * Patient education for people with chronic liver disease should be reinforced * Refer to “Ten Tips for People w/ Chronic Liver Disease” Prevention * Two forms of vaccine now available. * Twinrix – contains both hepatitis A and B vaccines available in an accelerated schedule or standard series * Individual hepatitis B vaccine * Standard schedule is given: o Time 0 o 1 mo o 6 mo Prevention * Educate to avoid IVDU, high risk sexual activity * Prevent peri natal transmission. Serology of pregnant women for HBsAg is standard of practice in U.S. * If pregnant female has high viremia, refer to hepatologist for treatment during the 3rd trimester to reduce risk of transmission to neonate * Babies of HBsAg mothers receive hepatitis B immune globulin with 12 hours of birth and begin the vaccine series immediately Treatment * Six approved medications as of July 2008 o Interferon alpha o Pegylated interferon o Lamivudine o Adefovir Dipivoxil o Entecavir o Telbivudine o Tenofovir approved * Refer to hepatologist The Cholestatic Liver Diseases Adults Cholestatic Liver Disease Etiologies * Immune Mediated: PBC, PSC, autoimmune cholangitis, liver allograft rejection, graft-versus-host disease * Infectious: acute viral hepatitis * Genetic and Developmental: cystic fibrosis, Alagille’s syndrome (syndrome w/ paucity of intrahepatic bile ducts), fibro polycystic liver disease * Neoplastic: Cholangiocarcinoma * Drug-Induced Ductopenia: amoxicillin, amitriptyline, cyproheptadine, erythromycin, tetracycline, thiabendazole * Ischemic * Idiopathic Pathogenesis of Cholestatic Disorders * Immune response (inflammation, auto-antibody) or hepatotoxic injury to bile ducts * Bile duct injury by bile acids - >
* Retention of bile acids in hepatocytes - >
* Liver cell damage, apoptosis, necrosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis - > liver failure

Complications of Chronic Cholestasis
* Pruritis believed to be 2/2 increased opioid receptor tone, or centrally mediated
* Fatigue
* Bone disease: osteopenia, osteoporosis
* Fat soluble vitamin deficiency
* Malabsorption (Sprue, bile salt deficiency, pancreatic insufficiency)

Pruritis in Cholestasis

* Therapy:
o Urso in AICP, PBC (15-30mg/Kg/day)
o Opiate antagonist naltrexone (50mg/day)
o 5-HT3 antagonist odansetron
o SSRI sertaline
o Bile acid sequesterant cholestyramine 4gm t.i.d. to q.i.d.
o Antihistamines rarely effective
o Rifampin 150mg to 300mg b.i.d.

Fatigue in Cholestasis
* High prevalence in Primary Biliary Cirrhosis unrelated to disease severity or duration
* Pathogenesis
o ?decreased hypothalamic cortico-tropin-releasing hormone
o ?CNS accumulation of manganese
* Prognosis worse
* No effective treatment

Bone Disease in Cholestasis
* Clinical manifestations: low bone density, fractures of axial and/or appendicular skeleton
* Pathogenesis: hyperbilirubinemia impairs osteoblast proliferative activity
* Therapy: bisphosphonates, calcium, vitamin D, weight bearing exercise, estrogens appear to be safe

1. Primary Biliary Cirrhosis
A chronic and progressive disease of unknown etiology affecting primarily middle-aged women

Primary Biliary Cirrhosis
* Affects all races
* 9:1 ratio female > male, age 20 – 65
* Characterized by small intrahepatic bile duct destruction and cholestasis
* In the presence of cirrhosis, male > likely than female to develop hepatocellular carcinoma

PBC
Laboratory Findings
* Alk Phos 2x to 20x ULN in > 90% of patients
* AST-ALT 1x to 5x ULN > 90%
* Bilirubin – variable. When elevated, may indicate advanced cirrhosis or 2nd condition
* Hypercholesterolemia in 80% of patients

Hypercholesterolemia Unique in PBC
* Hypercholesterolemia
* IgM 1x to 5x ULN > 90%
* Anti mitochondrial antibody > 1:20 titer >90%
* Anti nuclear and/or smooth muscle antibody > 1:80 may be seen in “overlap syndrome”
* Liver biopsy helpful to grade and stage disease, determine if cirrhosis present

PBC Treatment
* Slowly progressive, even if asymptomatic
* Ursodeoxycholic acid only effective therapy. May improve natural history
* Transplant curative
* Manage disease specific complications

Effects of Ursodeoxycholate
* Urso is a hydrophilic bile acid having multiple anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory actions
* Urso administration in the setting of pro-apoptotic stimuli (bile salts, ethanol, TGF-beta, FAS ligand) inhibits in vitro apoptosis (programmed cell death)
* Reduces mitochondrial membrane permeability

Monitor for and Treat PBC Associated Disorders
* Keratoconjunctivitis Sicca
* Scleroderma, CREST syndrome
* Gallstones
* Arthropathies:
o Rheumatoid, psoriatic arthritis, Raynaud’s phenomenon, Hypertrophic osteodystrophy, Avascular necrosis, Chondrocalcinosis
* Thyroid disease, renal tubular acidosis

PBC Associated Disorders
* Malabsorption
* Celiac Sprue
o 6% of PBC patients have Celiac Sprue
o 3% of Sprue patients have PBC
* Bile salt deficiency
* Pancreatic insufficiency

Manage PBC Complications
* Standard liver disease recommendations
* PBC specific symptom management
* Refer for liver transplantation
* Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
Rare
* One of the most important cholestatic liver diseases in the western world
* Chronic, cholestatic liver disease characterized by
o Inflammation
o Obstruction
o Fibrosis of both intrahepatic and extrahepatic bile ducts

Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
* Many patients will progress to cirrhosis
* Highly variable in and between individuals
* Usually fatal important complication is cholangiocarcinoma
* Etiology largely unknown, though evidence points to immune system involvement

PSC
* No specific treatment
* Treatment aimed at management of disease associated conditions
* Prevalence unknown
* Almost half are asymptomatic at diagnosis
* No specific diagnostic marker for PSC

PSC Clinical Features
* Labs:
o Two- fold increase in alk phos, most have increased AST and ALT
o Albumin and protime normal in early disease
o Bilirubin initially normal, but gradually increases and fluctuates widely w/ extrahepatic biliary strictures, infection, obstructing stone sludge or stone
* Imaging
* Magnetic resonance cholangio-pancreatography demonstrates intrahepatic duct changes
* Histology
* Liver biopsy for staging the disease
* Liver biopsy to rule out other potentially treatable causes of cholestasis

PSC Patient Presentation
* Large bile duct PSC may have asymptomatic elevation of LFTs. Can be cirrhotic w/ no symptoms
* Symptomatic patients will have cholestasis-type symptoms plus:
o Abdominal pain
o Weight loss
o Hepatomegaly
o Acute cholangitis

PSC Associated Diseases
* Inflammatory bowel disease, most often ulcerative colitis
* These patients have increased risk for colorectal carcinoma
* 25% have another autoimmune disease

PSC Complications
* Related to cholestasis: pruritis, fatigue, fat soluble vitamin deficiency, osteoporosis
* Related to cirrhosis: liver failure, peristomal varices
* Extra-hepatic disease: IBD, pancreatitis, sprue, diabetes, thyroid disease
* PSC specific

PSC Disease Specific Complications
* Fever
* Abdominal pain
* Dominant stricture
* Gall stones
* Cholangiocarcinoma

PSC Prognosis
* Factors of Importance:
o Older age
o Increasing bilirubin
o Histological advanced stage
o Child-Pugh-Turcotte Class C

PSC Treatment Goal Improve Quality of Life
* Medical support
* Endoscopic treatments
* Surgical interventions
* Liver transplantation – PSC recurrence is more frequent than PSC

Case Study
Reference

Hepatitis A & B .ppt

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Magnetic Resonance CholangioPancreatography



Magnetic Resonance CholangioPancreatography
By:Falguny Bhavan MS4
Oregon Health & Sciences University
Radiology Clerkship


Objectives
* Introduction
* Technique
* Advantages
* Limitations
* Clinical applications

Introduction
Anatomy of the Hepato-Biliary and Pancreatic system

Technique
* Basic principle: body fluids (bile and pancreatic secretions) have high signal intensity on heavily T2-weighted MR sequences therefore, appear white
o Background tissues generate little signal appear dark
* Stationary or slow-flowing fluid within the bile and pancreatic ducts appears bright relative to low signal intensity produced by adjacent solid tissues
* New MR advancements allow faster imaging in which imaging is performed during single breath-holding session to reduce motion artifact due to respiration
* New variants such as rapid acquisition with relaxation enhancement (RARE) and half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin-echo (HASTE) can be performed in a breath-hold period with a scan time of <20 seconds provide superior images Advantages * Does not require intravenous or oral contrast material to be administered into the ductal system * Avoids complications of ERCP such as pancreatitis (3-5%), sepsis, perforation, hemorrhage, sedation * Can be completed in 10 minutes, easily performed as outpatient examination * Passive procedure; displays the ducts in the resting state and more accurately displays native caliber of the duct than ERCP. o In ERCP, segments may be overdistended because of attempt to visualize the duct upstream from a stricture, or segments may be underdistended because of the operator's fear of inducing cholangitis or pancreatitis. Limitations * Purely diagnostic, does not provide access for therapeutic intervention (e.g. stone extraction, stent insertion, or biopsy) * Image artifact due to other structures in abdomen with high fluid content * Lack of patient compliance; claustrophobia, inability to breath-hold * Dropout of signal can be caused by metallic clips, crossing defects induced by the right hepatic artery, or from severely narrowed ducts, such as occurs with primary sclerosing cholangitis * Lower resolution than direct cholangiography o Can miss small stones (<4 mm), small ampullary lesions, primary sclerosing cholangitis, and strictures of the ducts Clinical applications: Diseases Diagnosed by MRCP Biliary Disease * Screening examination in patients with low or intermediate probability of choledocholithiasis * Cholangiocarcinoma * Anatomic variants (low or medial duct insertion, aberrant right hepatic duct) * Failed or incomplete ERCP * Post-operative anatomy or screening for biliary complications * Primary sclerosing cholangitis * Cystic disease of bile duct (choledochal cyst, choledochocele, Caroli’s disease) Pancreatic Disease * Anatomic variants (pancreas divisum) * Chronic pancreatitis * Pancreatic cancer Clinical Applications: General guidelines for selection of MRCP or ERCP Obstruction of the Common Bile Duct * MRCP can visualize the normal or dilated common bile duct in 96 to 100 percent of patients. * Strictures typically appear as focal areas of ductal narrowing or signal void with proximal dilatation. * Cause of biliary strictures may be more difficult to determine on the basis of MRCP alone. o lacks specificity o differentiation between benign and malignant causes is based on a combination of clinical, radiographic, and pathological data * Obstruction 2° to calculi, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, or pancreatitis is usually obvious with MRCP, and with aid of conventional MRI or CT Obstruction Combined Biliary-Duct Obstruction and Pancreatic-Duct Obstruction Due to a Small Mass in the Pancreatic Head. The biliary-duct obstruction is indicated by the curved arrow, and the pancreatic-duct obstruction by the straight arrow. The mass was identified on axial, contrast-enhanced, T1-weighted images (not shown) obtained by routine MRI during the same examination. Arrowheads indicate the pancreatic duct. * ERCP is more beneficial in pts with dilatation of the common bile duct who have obstruction at the ampulla, since it permits direct visualization of the ampulla, biopsy of lesions, manometry, or endoscopic sonography. * MRCP Study of 79 cases of biliary obstruction found 14 due to malignant cause; 6 cases due to ampullary carcinoma. o 2 of 6 cases were misdiagnosed as benign obstructions, and 2 cases of benign obstruction were thought to be ampullary cancers. (This study used an early form of the technique, and results may be more accurate with the currently available technology.) * MRCP performed after pharmacologic stimulation with secretin has been shown to be helpful in evaluating ampullary obstruction Secretin-enhanced MRCP * Visualization of the pancreatic duct can be improved with imaging after administration of IV secretin * Secretin frequently used when pancreatic duct is not apparent on MRCP * Reduces the incidence of false positive findings of strictures Secretin-enhanced MRCP Dynamic MRCP with Intravenous Injection of Secretin in Patient with Abdominal Pain after a Whipple Procedure. (ERCP was not attempted because the patient had a pancreaticoenteric anastomosis.) In Panel A, the pancreatic duct (arrowheads) is incompletely visualized on MRCP before the administration of secretin. In Panel B, an MRCP obtained 15 minutes after the administration of secretin shows prominent and prolonged dilatation of the pancreatic duct upstream of a stricture (arrow) at the pancreaticoenteric anastomosis. Common duct stones * Displayed by MRCP as a signal void within bright signal arising from bile * MRCP is a useful means of determining presence or absence of CBD stones, as well as number, size, and location * MRCP is as accurate as ERCP for detecting choledocholithiasis o Sensitivity = 95-100% o Specificity = 85-100% * Increased sensitivity in pts with suspected gallstone pancreatitis, and pts with non-specific abdominal pain and normal LFTs * Stones larger than 4 mm are readily seen but difficult to differentiate from filling defects such as blood clots, tumor, sludge, or parasites o Other mimickers include flow artifacts, biliary air, and a pseudostone at the ampulla * In the presence of a dilated CBD, MRCP has a 90 to 95 percent concordance with ERCP in diagnosing CBD stones over 4 mm in diameter * ERCP is preferred in pts with cholangitis because it allows therapeutic drainage Cholangiocarcinoma * Role of MRCP in the diagnosis and management of bile duct malignancy is not yet defined * Useful noninvasive adjunct * Capability to evaluate the bile ducts both above and below a stricture while also identifying any intrahepatic mass lesions * Study of 126 patients with suspected bile duct obstruction showed that MRCP alone has limited specificity in the diagnosis of malignant strictures o Malignant obstruction dx by MRCP in 12 out of 14 pts o Positive predictive value = 86% o Negative predictive value = 98% Pancreatitis * Acute pancreatitis o MRCP is useful for evaluating bile ducts and cystic duct remnants for stones, for evaluating the pancreatic ducts, and for documenting the presence of cysts in or around the pancreas. o ERCP is often preferred in patients with gallstone pancreatitis since endoscopic papillotomy can be performed in pts with obstructive jaundice or biliary sepsis. * Chronic pancreatitis o MRCP is useful in demonstrating complications such as, ductal dilatation, strictures, intraductal calculi, fistulas, and pseudocysts o Defines ductal anatomy and extent of ductal disease prior to surgical drainage * MRCP is as accurate as ERCP for distinguishing pancreatic cancer from chronic pancreatitis. o In study of 124 patients who were suspected of having pancreatic cancer, pts underwent a number of diagnostic studies, including ERCP and MRCP. The correct diagnosis was confirmed histologically and clinically. 37 patients (30 percent) dx with pancreatic cancer; others had chronic pancreatitis (46 percent) or other causes. o MRCP sensitivity (84%) and specificity (97%) for diagnosis of pancreatic cancer o ERCP sensitivity (70%) and specificity (94%) * Secretin-enhanced MRCP is being increasingly studied for evaluation of pancreatic exocrine function and in the early diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis Variant ductal anatomy * MRCP is also useful in demonstrating variant anatomy and congenital anomalies of the biliary tract and pancreatic duct o Pancreas divisum o Choledochal cyst o Annular pancreas o Abnormal pancreaticobiliary junctions o Aberrant bile ducts * And in evaluation of pts prior to laparoscopic cholecystectomy Normal Extrahepatic Bile Duct and Incidental Pancreas Divisum. Magnetic resonance cholangio-pancreatography is an accurate method of diagnosing pancreas divisum because it shows the dominant dorsal pancreatic duct (arrowheads) continuously from the tail to the head of the pancreas, crossing the common bile duct (curved arrows) and draining at the minor papilla (straight arrow) superiorly and separately from the common bile duct. GB denotes gallbladder. Failed or incomplete ERCP * ERCP is technically challenging o Associated with 10-20% failed cannulation rate o Anatomic variants can contribute to failed ERCP attempts * MRCP is useful in demonstrating variant anatomy o MRCP may have advantages compared to ERCP in specific settings such as pts who have gastric outlet or duodenal stenosis or who have had surgical rearrangement (eg, Billroth II) or ductal disruption, resulting in ducts that can’t be assessed by ERCP * MRCP also allows evaluation of ducts in pts with contraindications for ERCP: o Cervical spine fractures, head and neck tumors, sleep apnea, other diseases/ injuries that preclude placement of endoscope or positioning Post-surgical anatomy Normal Results of Magnetic Resonance Cholangiopancreatograpy in a Patient after Cholecystectomy. Imaging was performed in two seconds with the thick, single-slice technique. The normal common bile duct (arrow) and pancreatic duct (arrowheads) are clearly visible. Du denotes duodenal bulb. References Magnetic Resonance CholangioPancreatography.ppt

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Cholangitis & Management of Choledocholithiasis



Cholangitis & Management of Choledocholithiasis
By: Ruby Wang MS 3


* Cholangitis
o Clinical manifestations
o Diagnosis
o Treatment
* Diagnosis and management of choledocholithiasis
o Pre-operative
o Intra-operative
o Post-operative

Case
* HPI:
o 86 yo lady p/w 3-4 episodes of RUQ/mid-epigastric abdominal pain over the last year, lasting generally several hours, accompanied by occasional emesis, anorexia, and sensation of shaking chills.
o ROS: negative otherwise
* PE:
o VS: T 36.2, P98 , RR 18, BP 124/64
o Abdominal exam significant for RUQ TTP
* Labs
o AST 553, ALT 418. Alk Phos 466. Bilirubin 2.7
o WBC 30.3
* Imaging
o Abdominal US: multiple gallstones, no pericholecystic fluid, no extrahepatic/intrahepatic/CBD dilatation
Introduction
* Cholangitis is bacterial infection superimposed on biliary obstruction
* First described by Jean-Martin Charcot in 1850s as a serious and life-threatening illness
* Causes
o Choledocholithiasis
o Obstructive tumors
+ Pancreatic cancer
+ Cholangiocarcinoma
+ Ampullary cancer
+ Porta hepatis
o Others
+ Strictures/stenosis
+ ERCP
+ Sclerosing cholangitis
+ AIDS
+ Ascaris lumbricoides
Epidemiology
Pathogenesis
Clinical Manifestations
* RUQ pain (65%)
* Fever (90%)
o May be absent in elderly patients
* Jaundice (60%)
* Hypotension (30%)
* Altered mental status (10%)
Additional History
Additional Physical
Diagnosis: lab values
* CBC
o 79% of patients have WBC > 10,000, with mean of 13,600
o Septic patients may be neutropenic
* Metabolic panel
o Low calcium if pancreatitis
o 88-100% have hyperbilirubinemia
o 78% have increased alkaline phosphatase
o AST and ALT are mildly elevated
+ Aminotransferase can reach 1000U/L- microabscess formation in the liver
o GGT most sensitive marker of choledocholithiasis
* Amylase/Lipase
o Involvement of lower CBD may cause 3-4x elevated amylase
* Blood cultures
o 20-30% of blood cultures are positive
Diagnosis: first-line imaging
Ultrasonography
o Advantage:
+ Sensitive for intrahepatic/extrahepatic/CBD dilatation
# CBD diameter > 6 mm on US associated with high prevalence of choledocholithaisis
# Of cholangitis patients, dilated CBD found in 64%,
+ Rapid at bedside
+ Can image aorta, pancreas, liver
+ Identify complications: perforation, empyema, abscess
o Disadvantage
+ Not useful for choledocholithiasis:
# Of cholangitis patients, CBD stones observed in 13%
+ 10-20% falsely negative - normal U/S does not r/o cholangitis
# acute obstruction when there is no time to dilate
# Small stones in bile duct in 10-20% of cases

CT
o Advantages
+ CT cholangiograhy enhances CBD stones and increases detection of biliary pathology
# Sensitivity for CBD stones is 95%
+ Can image other pathologies: ampullary tumors, pericholecystic fluid, liver abscess
+ Can visualize other pathologies- cholangitis: diverticuliits, pyelonephritis, mesenteric ischemia, ruptured appendix
o Disadvantages
+ Sensitivity to contrast
+ Poor imaging of gallstones
Diagnostic: MRCP and ERCP
Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP)
o Advantage
o Disadvantage:
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)

Medical Treatment
* Resucitate, Monitor, Stabilize if patient unstable
o Consider cholangitis in all patients with sepsis
* Antibiotics
o Empiric broad-spectrum Abx after blood cultures drawn
Surgical treatment
* Endoscopic biliary drainage
o Endoscopic sphincterotomy with stone extraction and stent insertion
* Surgery
o Emergency surgery replaced by non-operative biliary drainage
o Once acute cholangitis controlled, surgical exploration of CBD for difficult stone removal
o Elective surgery: low M & M compared with emergency survey
o If emergent surgery, choledochotomy carries lower M&M compared with cholecystectomy with CBD exploration
Our case…
* Condition:
* ERCP attempted
* Laparoscopic cholecystectomy planned
o Dissection of triangle of Calot
o Cystic duct and artery visualized and dissected
o Cystic duct ductotomy
o Insertion of cholangiogram catheter advanced and contrast bolused into cystic duct for IOC
* Intraoperative cholangiogram
o Several common duct filling defects consistent with stones
o Decision to proceed with CBD exploration

Choledocholithiasis
* Choledocholithiasis develops in 10-20% of patients with gallbladder disease
* At least 3-10% of patients undergoing cholecystectomy will have CBD stones

Pre-op diagnosis & management
o Diagnosis: Clinical history and exam, LFTs, Abdominal U/S, CT, MRCP
+ High risk (>50%) of choledocholithiasis:
# clinical jaundice, cholangitis,
# CBD dilation or choledocholithiasis on ultrasound
# Tbili > 3 mg/dL correlates to 50-70% of CBD stone
+ Moderate risk (10-50%):
# h/o pancreatitis, jaundice correlates to CBD stone in 15%
# elevated preop bili and AP,
# multiple small gallstones on U/S
+ Low risk (<5%): # large gallstones on U/S # no h/o jaundice or pancreatitis, # normal LFTs o Treatment: + ERCP + Surgery Intra-op diagnosis and management * Diagnosis: intraoperative cholangiography (IOC) o Cannulation of cystic duct, filling of L and R hepatic ducts, CBD and common hepatic duct diameter, presence or absence of filling defects. o Detect CBD stones o Potentially identify bile duct abnormalities, including iatrogenic injuries o Sensitivity 98%, specificity 94% o Morbidity and mortality low * Treatment o Open CBD exploration + Most surgeons prefer less invasive techniques o Laparoscopic CBD exploration + via choledochotomy: CBD dilatation > 6mm
+ via cystic duct (66-82.5%)
+ CBD clearance rate 97%
+ Morbidity rate 9.5%
+ Stones impacted at Sphincter of Oddi most difficult to extract
o Intraoperative ERCP

Early years: Open CBD exploration & Introduction of endoscopic sphincterotomy
* 1889, 1st CBD exploration by Ludwig Courvoisier, a Swiss surgeon
o Kocherization of duodenum and short longitudinal choledochotomy
o Stones removed with palpation, irrigation with flexible catheters, forceps,
o Completion with T-tube drainage
o For many years, this was the standard treatment for cholecystocholedocholithiasis
* 1970s, endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES)
o Gained wide acceptance as good, less invasive, effective alternative
o In patients with CBD stones who have previously undergone cholecystectomy, ES is the method of choice

Open surgery vs Endoscopic sphincterotomy
* In patients with intact gallbladders, ES or open choledochotomy?
o Design: 237 patients with CBD stone and intact gallbladders, 66% managed with ES and rest with open choledochotomy
o Results: No significant difference in morbidity and mortality rates
+ Lower incidence of retained stones after open choledochotomy
o Conclusion: open surgery superior to ES in those with intact gallbladders
* Is ES followed by open CCY superior to open CCY+ CBDE?
o Results: Initial stone clearance higher with open surgery
* Cochraine database of systematic reviews
* In patients with severe cholangitis, open or ES?

Laparoscopic CBD Exploration
* In 1989, laparoscopic removal of gallbladder replaced open surgery
o In the past decade, laparoscopic CBD exploration (LCBDE) developed
* Techniques
o IOC define biliary anatomy: size and length of cystic duct, size of bile duct stones
o Choledochotomy
o Transcystic approach
* Results
Post-op Diagnosis and Management
* T-tube cholangiography
* ERCP
In summary
* Non-surgical care first line
* Surgical Care if endoscopy and IR drainage fail
* Open procedure
* Cholecystectomy
* CBD exploration

Cholangitis & Management of Choledocholithiasis.ppt

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Biliary Tumors Cholangiocarcinoma and Cancer of the Gall Bladder



Biliary Tumors Cholangiocarcinoma and Cancer of the Gall Bladder
By: Larry Pennington, MD

Cholangiocarcinoma
Etiology
Ulcerative Colitis
Thorotrast Exposure
Sclerosing Cholangitis
Typhoid Carrier
Choledochal Cysts
Adult Polycystic Kidney Disease
Hepatolithiasis
Liver Flukes

Papillomatosis of Bile Ducts
Cholangiocarcinoma
Extra-hepatic: Distribution
Diagnosis and Initial Workup
Intra and Extra-hepatic Cholangiocarcinoma
Cholangiocarcinoma Intra-hepatic Disease
* Suspicious mass on CT. Quadruple phase CT with 0.5 cm cuts through the liver and portal hepatitis. Consider CTA reconstruction.
* Bx
* If adenoncarcinoma: look for primary with a chest CT and upper/lower endoscopy.
* Colon, pancreas, and stomach are common primary sites.

Cholangiocarcinoma Intra-hepatic Disease-Surgery/Ablation
* Extent of surgical therapy is determined by the location, hepatic function, and underlying cirrhosis.
* Anatomic resections have lowest recurrence rates. However nonanatomic resection increases potential surgical candidates and improves survival.
* Hepatic devascularization prior to resection is preferred
* Ablative therapy gives good local control.

Child’s Classification
Intra-hepatic Disease: Extent of Resection
Intra-hepatic Disease
Representative Case
MRCP of Extra-hepatic Cholangiocarcinoma at the Bifurcation
Klatskin tumor
Cholangiocarcinoma Extra-hepatic
Cholangiocarcinoma Pathology
Extra-hepatic Disease: Surgical Therapy
ERCP: Distal CBD Cancer
Ca of CBD Bifurcation
Node Dissection in Bile Duct Excision
Roux-en-Y Hepaticojejunostomy
Extra-hepatic Disease: Positive Margins or Unresectable
Extra-hepatic Disease: Unstentable
* Bypass if possible
* If not use proximal decompression and feeding jejunostomy
* Chemotherapy/Radiation Therapy/Brachy therapy as tolerated or clinical trial.
Cholangiocarcinoma Prognosis
* Best Result are with distal CBD tumors completely excised. Cure = 40%
* Incomplete resection plus radiation gives a median survival of 30 m.
* Stenting plus chemo/radiation gives a median survival of 17 to 27m
* Those stented alone live only a few months

Cancer of the Gall Bladder
Gall Bladder Cancer
Presentation (1)
Presentation 2
PET Scan and Cholangiocarcinoma
Sclerosing type of Cholangiocarcinoma
Cytological Brushing of Cholangiocarcinoma

Biliary Tumors Cholangiocarcinoma and Cancer of the Gall Bladder.ppt

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