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Acute liver failure

From Surgopaedia

"Sudden loss of hepatic function in a person without pre-existing liver disease"

Classification

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  • Fulminant - development of encephalopathy within 8/52 of development of symptoms
  • Subfulminant - have had liver disease for up to 26 weeks before encephalopathy

Causes

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  • Drugs - paracetamol, flucloxacillin, anaesthetic agents
  • Budd-Chiari
  • Malignancy
  • Fatty liver disease of pregnancy
  • Wilson's disease
  • HAV
  • Autoimmune hepatitis
  • Ischaemic hepatitis
  • HBV
  • Clinical course
    • Sudden loss of functional hepatocyte mass
    • Portal HTN
    • Encephalopathy, coagulopathy, renal failure, sepsis
    • MODS often occurs
    • Death occurs from cerebral oedema of infection

Complications

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  • Encephalopathy
Grade Mental status Asterixis EEG
I Euphoria/depression Yes/no Usually normal
Mild confusion
Slurred speech
Disordered sleep
II Lethargy Yes Abnormal
Moderate confusion
III Marked confusion Yes Abnormal
Incoherent
Sleeping but arousable
IV Coma No Abnormal
  • Cerebral oedema - common cause of death - secondary to ammonia, however lactulose doesn't help
    • Decrease ICP to below 20-25mmHg - elevate head of bed, minimise stimulation, mannitol, hyperventilation
    • Maintain cerebral perfusion pressure >50-60mmHg
    • Once increased ICP develops, ominous sign. If it's visible on CT, likely irreversible damage, and transplant contraindicated.
    • ICP monitors may or may not stack up - risk of haemorrhage.
  • Coagulopathy
  • Metabolic abnormalities
    • Hypokalaemia
    • Hyponatraemia
    • Hypophosphataemia - paracetamol-induced liver failure
    • Hypoglycaemia
  • Renal failure
  • Pulmonary dysfunction - oedema and pnuemonia
  • Seizures
    • Treat with phenytoin

Determining need for transplant

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  • Kings College criteria
    • Attempts to define those patients who are going to die without transplant
    • Paracetamol overdose criteria: a bit too inclusive for paracetamol overdose - many patients meeting these criteria do not go on to need transplant
      • pH <7.3 or
      • INR >6.5 and serum creatinine >300
    • The non-paracetamol criteria are still valid though
      • INR >6.5 or three of:
      • INR >3.5
      • Bilirubin >301
      • Age <=10 or >40
      • Cause of drug toxicity
      • Time from onset of jaundice to encephalopathy >7 days


See also separate topic 'liver transplant'