Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine (44 page)

BOOK: Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine
13.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Acute workup
:
toxins
(EtOH, acetaminophen);
vascular abnl
(U/S w/ Doppler);
viral tests
: IgM anti-HAV, HBsAg, IgM anti-HBc, HBV DNA, HCV RNA, anti-HEV, ± EBV, CMV, HSV, VZV;
autoimmune
(ANA, ASMA, ALKM);
ceruloplasmin

Chronic workup
: HBsAg, anti-HCV; Fe, TIBC; glc, HbA1c, TG; ANA, ASMA, ALKM; anti-tissue transglutaminase; ceruloplasmin & ɑ1-AT; TSH; vascular abnl (U/S w/ Doppler)
Figure 3-4 
Approach to abnormal liver tests with cholestatic pattern
Figure 3-5 
Approach to abnormal liver tests with isolated hyperbilirubinemia
Figure 3-6 
Approach to abnormal liver tests with infiltrative pattern

Abnormal liver tests in asymptomatic patients
(
Clin Liver Dis
2009;13:167)
• Careful review of history (
meds, EtOH
/drug use, exposures, risk factors for liver disease) and physical exam. Evaluate for any clues to etiology 1st (eg, d/c med and repeat LFTs).

• Confirm hepatic source: if primarily ↑ AΦ (✓ GGT) or AST > ALT (✓ CK, aldolase, TFT) •
Hepatocellular
Evaluate for most common causes: hepatitis A/B/C, hemochromatosis; screen for evidence of chronic liver disease (platelets, PT/INR, albumin)
If
evaluation → lifestyle modification (wt loss, DM control) + repeat test 6 mo
If evidence of chronic liver disease or persistent lab abnl, screen for less common causes: AIH, Wilson’s, celiac, ɑ
1
-AT; ✓ U/S & consider liver bx
If still
→ liver bx if ALT or AST >2× ULN for >6 mo; o/w observe

Cholestatic
: ✓ RUQ U/S, AMA
if biliary dilatation or obstruction → MRCP
if AMA
and U/S
, or AMA
and U/S w/ abnl parenchyma → liver bx
if AMA & U/S
:  AΦ >1.5× ULN → consider bx;  AΦ <1.5× ULN → observe

Isolated hyperbilirubinemia
: ✓ conjugated vs. unconjugated
conjugated → perform abdominal U/S → MRCP if dilatation or obstruction; if nl ultrasound ✓ AMA and consider MRCP or liver bx
unconjugated → ✓ Hct, retic count, smear, LDH, haptoglobin

Common medications that cause abnormal liver tests
(
http://livertox.nlm.nih.gov
)

HEPATITIS

VIRAL

Hepatitis A
(ssRNA; 30–45% of acute viral hepatitis in U.S.)
• Transmission: fecal–oral route; contaminated food, water, shellfish; daycare ctr outbreaks • Incubation: 2–6 wk; no chronic carrier state

• Sx: ↓ appetite, malaise, fever, N/V, RUQ pain, ± jaundice; rarely fulminant
• Diagnosis: acute hepatitis =
IgM anti-HAV; past exposure =
IgG anti-HAV (
IgM) • Treatment for acute HAV supportive. Prevention: vaccinate children & Pts w/ chronic HBV, HCV (? if cost-effective) or other chronic liver disease (2 doses at 0, 6–12 mo) • Postexposure ppx: age 1–40 y → vaccine; age <1 or >40 y or immunosupp → Ig

Other books

Complicated by You by Wright, Kenya
Un hombre que promete by Adele Ashworth
The Secrets of Casanova by Greg Michaels
Nanny by Christina Skye
Absolution Gap by Alastair Reynolds
Wicked Days by Lily Harper Hart
The 17 Day Diet by Dr. Mike Moreno
The Search for Justice by Robert L Shapiro
Whiter Shades of Pale by Christian Lander
Innocent in Death by J. D. Robb