Liver disease in pregnancy
Appearance
Liver disease in pregnancy
[edit | edit source]- Abormalities in FBE, blood film and coags mark severe lift-threatening disease
Acute fatty liver of pregnancy
[edit | edit source]- Usually third trimester after 32 weeks. Higher risk in twin, male and primipara pregnancies.
- Possible relationship to pre-eclampsia - mild HTN, oedema and proteinuria
- Presentation
- Vomiting, polydipsia, epigastric or RUQ pain, malaise, fatigue, pruritis, rapidly progressive jaundice to liver failure
- Investigation
- Transaminases generally 300-500, with raised bilirubin and ALP
- USS has poor sensitivity in identifying acute fatty liver but is necessary to exclude differentials
- FNA could confirm diagnosis, but not normally done because it wastes time
- Cured by delivery - that reduces mortality to about 20%, but mum's condition can worsen post-delivery
- Liver transplant may be required
- No chronic disease following recovery
- Recurrent disease with future pregnancies is not expected, but has been reported
Cholestasis of pregnancy
[edit | edit source]- Strong genetic predisposition
- Itch is predominant feature, along with jaundice
- Cholestatic LFTs but mother is otherwise well. Can sometimes see a significant rise in transaminases.
- May be a history of similar problems in previous pregnancies or with oral contraception
- Associated with increased rate of fetal loss
- Ursodeoxycholic acid helps with maternal symptoms and appears to reduce fetal mortality
- Recurrence in future pregnancies is likely
Pre-eclampsia/HELLP
[edit | edit source]- HTN, proteinuria and hyper-reflexia
- Liver disease occurs in about 10% of pre-eclampsia
- Transaminases can go above 500. jaundice is often mild.
- Most maternal deaths are cerebral, but liver can contribute through infarction, haemorrhage or haematoma
- Cured by delivery
- HELLP = haemolysis, elevated LFTs, low platelets (microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia) - needs urgent delivery