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The hepatobiliary system refers to the liver, gall bladder
and bile ducts – organs that are involved with the
production, storage, transport and release of bile, a
secretion that prepared fats for further digestion.
There are numerous conditions that can harm the hepatobiliary
system, some of which are life-threatening and ultimately,
require surgery and/or liver transplantation. Liver
damage can occur from a variety of sources: infections
with viruses (hepatitis A, B, and C viruses), exposure
to toxic drugs or chemicals, excessive use of alcohol,
genetic disorders , diabetes, heart failure, cancer
and shock. Some of the signs and symptoms of liver disease
include:
- jaundice (yellowing of the skin and eye)
- pruritus (itching)
- dark, tea-colored urine
- weight loss
- muscle wasting
- ascites (swelling of the abdomen with fluid)
- fatigue
- easy bruising and bleeding (bleeding gums or frequent
nosebleeds)
- vomiting blood
- blood in the stool (bright red blood or black, tar-like
stool)
- mental confusion
In many cases, the liver is able to repair itself;
in others, a variety of treatments may be effective.
However, if liver damage is severe, the organ may not
recover, resulting in liver failure which is life threatening.
Once this happens, the patient may need a new liver.
Cirrhosis
Cirrhosis describes a condition in which damaged liver
cells are replaced by scar tissue. Over time, the build-up
of scar tissue becomes so great that it impacts blood
flow through the liver, destroying more liver cells
and ultimately leading to greater and greater loss of
liver function.
Almost any liver disease can result in cirrhosis,
but excessive use of alcohol remains the most common
cause.
Hepatitis
Inflammation of the liver is called hepatitis. Inflammation
(or soreness) of the liver can be traced to many different
causes, including viral infections, alcohol, fat accumulation
in the liver, an incorrectly functioning immune system,
exposure to chemicals and other toxins, and certain
drugs.
Hepatitis C
The hepatitis C virus (formerly referred to as non-A,
non-B hepatitis) is by far the leading indication for
liver transplantation in the United States, accounting
for between 30% and 50% of liver transplants, depending
on the state where the patient lives. According to the
American Liver Foundation, more than 4 million people
in the U.S. have hepatitis C, but only about 30 percent
who have the virus are aware that they do. The hepatitis
C virus kills between 10,000 and 12,000 Americans each
year, but the future holds even grimmer prospects. According
to some estimates, about 10 million Americans will have
hepatitis C within the next couple of decades.
Hepatitis C progresses very slowly, often over the
course of 10-20 years, and does much of its damage without
symptoms to indicate something might be wrong until
liver failure sets in. When a person with hepatitis
C does have symptoms, they typically are those associated
with a damaged liver. The damage to the liver eventually
takes the form of cirrhosis in about 25% of patients,
in which healthy liver cells are injured and scar tissue
forms in their place. Over time, cirrhosis impairs the
liver’s ability to perform critical functions
and reduces the amount of blood that flows through the
vital organ. Alcohol use increases the progress of liver
disease in Hepatitis C; further, the risk of liver cancer
is increased in patients with the infection.
The hepatitis C virus, discovered in 1989, is transmitted
via blood, so anyone who had a blood transfusion before
1992 or has used intravenous drugs could be at risk.
It’s possible for an infected mother to pass along
the virus to her child at birth. Researchers aren’t
sure whether hepatitis C can be transmitted sexually.
If so, it’s a rare occurrence, but people who’ve
had multiple partners are encouraged to be tested for
the virus. Certain groups of people have higher rates
of hepatitis C than the general population, such as
military veterans (especially those who served in Vietnam);
prisoners; hemophiliacs; the homeless; and people with
HIV.
Hepatitis B
The hepatitis B virus was once a major public health
threat in the United States?and it still is in some
parts of the world, such as Asia and the Pacific. While
the hepatitis B vaccine has become a valuable tool against
the virus, those people who currently are infected or
are not vaccinated and contract hepatitis B can face
serious health problems, including liver cancer, the
need for a liver transplant or even death. In the United
States, 1.25 million people have chronic hepatitis B,
and there are 5,000 to 6,000 hepatitis B-related deaths
each year. Fortunately, the hepatitis B virus, which
is transmitted via blood and bodily fluids, causes chronic
infection in less than five percent of the cases.
Hepatitis A
The hepatitis A virus is an acute disease that typically
is transmitted via contaminated water or food and resolves
without becoming a chronic disorder in almost all cases.
It is relatively uncommon in the United States, but
international travelers (particularly those headed for
developing countries or places with poor sanitation
systems) are encouraged to be vaccinated against the
hepatitis A virus.
Acute Fulminant Viral Hepatitis: This describes a sudden
and catastrophic loss of liver function due to infection
from any of the three previously described viruses.
Fortunately, only a small percentage of patients (less
than 1 percent) that have viral hepatitis develop this
variety. The patient deteriorates rapidly from being
healthy one day to possibly being comatose in 7-10 days.
In addition to causing rapidly progressive liver failure
there may be kidney failure, blood-clotting disorders,
brain damage and coma.
Toxic hepatitis: Rarely, medications intended to help
patients can cause the liver to become suddenly inflamed,
causing toxic hepatitis. For that reason, acetaminophen
(Tylenol™), isoniazid (a drug used to treat tuberculosis),
and many anti-convulsants should not be taken by people
with liver disease. Even with a healthy person, an excessive
amount of acetaminophen could cause toxic hepatitis.
In an occupational setting, toxic hepatitis can occur
when workers are exposed to certain chemicals in a confined
space and are not wearing or properly using respiratory
protective gear.
Autoimmune Hepatitis: This is a condition in which
a person’s immune system starts attacking their
own organs, as if they did not belong to that individual.
Autoimmune hepatitis primarily affects women and starts
as early as adolescence. As the name suggests, autoimmune
hepatitis can cause inflammation of the liver and other
symptoms common to liver disease?such as jaundice and
itching?as well as some associated with autoimmune disorders,
namely, aching joints. Fatigue, common to both, is a
frequently reported symptom. Lab tests show the presence
of increased gamma globulin and smooth muscle antibodies
in the blood.
Many people with autoimmune hepatitis respond well
to prednisone treatment, which can relieve symptoms
and cause elevated liver enzyme levels to return to
normal. Autoimmune hepatitis is a condition that needs
monitoring over the long term, as it can lead to cirrhosis
and ultimately, the need for a liver transplant.
Alcoholic Liver Disease
Heavy drinking over a long period of time can take
its toll on the liver by causing cirrhosis. Before the
onset of cirrhosis the liver sometimes may accumulate
an excessive amount of fat (known as fatty liver disease),
which interferes with its proper functioning. Moreover,
alcohol consumption can accelerate the rate at which
other conditions, such as hepatitis C, damage the organ.
According to the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients,
alcoholic liver disease was the third leading indication
for liver transplantation in 2003 (26 percent of the
transplant recipients in this category also were infected
with hepatitis C).
If alcoholic liver disease is identified in an early
stage and if the person stops drinking, it is possible
that his or her condition could improve. However, these
are two major “ifs,” considering the often-silent
nature of liver disease and the difficulty of breaking
an addiction. Sometimes, the liver damage is advanced,
and a liver transplant is needed.
Patients with alcoholic liver disease must meet the
following criteria to be considered for liver transplantation
at University Hospital: (1) abstinence from alcohol
use; (2) ongoing participation in an alcohol treatment
program or support group; and (3) presence of an adequate
psychosocial support system. These patients must enter
a formal contract with the transplant team outlining
the parameters of abstinence from alcohol use.
Liver Tumors
Tumors found in the liver can be benign (non-cancerous)
or malignant (cancerous). Some of the benign tumors
can be left untreated, but sometimes they must be removed.
Primary liver cancer (cancer that originates in the
liver) is not as common in the United States as it is
in other parts of the world, but there are still about
16,000 cases diagnosed in America each year. Most of
the time, liver cancer begins in another organ and spreads
to the liver. These tumors are called secondary liver
tumors or metastases. Liver cancer usually is not diagnosed
until it has reached an advanced stage, when removing
a tumor surgically is less often a possible treatment
choice.
Malignant (Cancerous)
Liver Tumors
Primary Liver Cancer or Hepatoma (Hepatocellular Cancer-HCC).
While HCC is relatively rare in the United States, it
is becoming more common as an unwanted consequence of
the hepatitis C epidemic. About 80 percent of the time,
HCC occurs in people who have cirrhosis, which can be
the result of chronic hepatitis B or C, alpha-1-antitrypsin
deficiency, or alcoholic or nonalcoholic fatty liver
disease.
HCC is difficult to treat, especially when the patient
also has cirrhosis. When the tumor is small or in only
one lobe of the liver, surgeons may be able to remove
it. This procedure is known as liver resection. If the
liver cirrhosis is advanced, liver resection carries
the risk of complete failure. In such instances liver
transplantation is the only option left for a possible
cure.
If either of the above surgeries is not an option,
radiofrequency ablation or chemoembolization, two minimally
invasive procedures, may be considered to shrink the
size of the tumor (see Treatments for a complete description
of these procedures).
Secondary Liver Cancer or Liver metastases: Cancer
that begins in another part of the body and then spreads
to the liver is by far the most common form of liver
cancer. The usual cancers that spread to the liver originate
in the colon (large intestine), breast and lung. Usually
liver metastases do not cause symptoms in their early
stages and when symptoms such as jaundice or pain do
occur, it is often too late. That’s why it is
important that patients with treated cancers have regular
follow ups to discover any reoccurrence or spread of
their tumors to the liver or other organs.
If there is only a single tumor or a few confined to
one side of the liver, the best treatment is to remove
them by liver resection. Sometimes, even when tumors
are present in both sides of the liver (as long as they
are not very large and too many), patients will benefit
from a liver resection. If resection is not feasible
then the best course of treatment is chemotherapy. Unlike
in HCC or hepatoma, liver transplantation does not benefit
patients with liver metastases, except in patients with
metastases of a special type called neuroendocrine tumors.
Metastatic neuroendocrine tumors (such as carcinoid
tumors) originate in the pancreas or small bowel and
then travel to the liver. Patients typically experience
severe abdominal pain, nausea, and diarrhea. When chemotherapy
or cryosurgery–which freezes the tumors as a method
of destroying them–are ineffective, liver transplantation
may be indicated.
Benign (Non-Cancerous)
Liver Tumors
Hepatic Hemangioma: A hemangioma is a cluster of tiny
blood vessels that form a non-cancerous tumor. A hepatic
hemangioma is a common, benign tumor found in the liver,
occurring more frequently in women than in men. They
are often found when patients undergo ultrasound or
CT scans for other problems. Most of the time, hepatic
hemangiomas do not cause any problems and do not require
treatment. When they do, it often is because of their
size and/or their proximity to other organs. Large hepatic
hemangiomas can cause pain or enlargement of the liver,
and in rare cases, they can rupture. In those instances
when the tumor is causing problems or thought to be
in a troublesome location, surgical removal is indicated.
In most instances surgeons are able to peel out the
hemangioma without removing much of the normal liver.
Hepatic Adenoma: A hepatic adenoma is an uncommon,
benign tumor that on rare occasion becomes a malignant
hepatocellular carcinoma. Adenomas usually do not have
any symptoms but are more likely to rupture than any
of the liver tumors and therefore patients with these
tumors need to seek medical advice. The long-term use
of oral contraceptives is associated with the development
of adenomas, and sometimes if a woman stops using that
form of birth control, the adenoma may shrink. If the
tumors do not shrink quickly surgical removal is indicated.
Focal Nodular Hyperplasia
(FNH)
With this type of benign tumor, a nodule (often containing
central scar tissue) grows in the liver. An FNH tumor
usually does not present any symptoms, but if it is
unusually large or causing pain, surgical removal often
is recommended. This is because in rare instances these
tumors can rupture; removing the ones that are large
and most likely to cause problems can be prudent. They
are found more frequently in women than in men, and
it’s thought that hormones “feed”
FNH tumors
Other Liver
Diseases
Alpha 1-Antitrypsin (AAT) Deficiency. AAT (also known
as alpha1 proteinase inhibitor) is a protein that is
made primarily in the liver. AAT belongs to a group
of proteins which help prevent certain white blood cell
enzymes (proteinases) from going beyond their regular
infection-fighting functions to attack healthy body
tissue. When the body doesn’t make enough AAT,
the lungs often don’t work as efficiently (patients
tend to develop emphysema) and the liver may be adversely
affected, leading to cirrhosis. AAT deficiency is an
inherited condition with two defective genes passed
along–one by each parent. This rare deficiency
affects fewer than 100,000 Americans.
Familial Amyloidosis
Polyneuropathy
This inherited disease, which occurs most often in
people of Swedish and Portuguese descent, is a mutation
of the transthyretin (TTR) molecule. Instead of the
TTR protein being formed, an incorrect protein - amyloid
- is produced. With this condition, amyloids are found
throughout the body, destroying nerves and interfering
with other organs. Neurological symptoms, low blood
pressure, and muscle wasting are common manifestations
of the disease, which can run a course of several years
but has no cure. Because TTR is made in the liver, liver
transplantation has been used as treatment.
Mushroom poisoning
Eating wild mushrooms can make a person severely ill,
or in the worst-case scenario, cause a painful death.
One particular type of mushroom, the Amanita phalloides,
causes about 90 percent of all mushroom eating-related
deaths. Mushroom poisoning typically involves a latent
period of as long as 24 hours, when no symptoms are
felt, followed by extreme gastrointestinal upset; damage
to several organs, including the liver; heart failure;
seizures; and coma.
The mushrooms’ toxins can have an especially
severe effect on the liver, attacking the organ’s
cells and shutting down some of its key functions. When
the liver begins to fail but there is medical reason
to believe the patient could survive the poisoning,
that person may be a candidate for liver transplantation.
Fatty liver and Non-Alcoholic
Steatohepatitis
In this condition an excessive amount of fat accumulates
in the liver due to a variety of reasons. The most common
reasons are excess weight, diabetes, excessive use of
alcohol and hepatitis C. Because of the rapid rise in
obesity in America, including among children, the number
of individuals with fatty liver is rapidly rising. Most
patients with fatty liver related to obesity or diabetes
retain normal liver function and do not experience any
problems during their lifetime. However, in some patients
the excess fat causes inflammation in the liver known
as Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis or NASH, as the condition
sometimes is called. The damage is similar to that which
occurs with alcoholic liver disease, but with NASH,
the patients have consumed little or no alcohol. Like
other liver diseases, NASH is typically “silent”
in its early stage, and the first indication of the
disease often comes from a routine blood test. Elevated
liver enzymes indicate to a physician that something
is irregular, leading to more tests and elimination
of other conditions. It takes a liver biopsy to confirm
a diagnosis of NASH; if there is only fat in the liver,
but no inflammation or damage, that’s indicative
of a simple fatty liver.
There is currently no treatment for NASH, but studies
indicate that by losing weight, getting more exercise,
and eating a healthy diet, patients can stop or even
reverse the damage caused by NASH.
Polycystic liver disease
This is a congenital (individuals are born with this
problem) condition, which may not be recognizable until
adulthood. When large cysts form in the liver, the condition
is known as polycystic liver disease. It’s common
for patients with polycystic liver disease to also have
cysts in their kidneys, or polycystic kidney disease.
When polycystic liver disease is severe, the liver looks
like a sponge. Polycystic liver disease rarely causes
liver failure, despite the presence of hundreds of cysts.
The most common symptoms are enlargement of the abdomen
and pain, which sometimes require treatment. Treatment
consists of either aspiration under x-ray guidance or
“unroofing” by creating an opening in the
cyst wall for drainage, a procedure known as fenestration.
The relief from aspiration is less durable than with
fenestration. Rarely, the severity of the pain calls
for liver transplantation.
Wilson’s disease: Normally, the liver helps the
body rid itself of copper. In people with Wilson’s
disease, the gene responsible for this process is defective,
and copper builds up in the liver, the brain, and other
organs. Over time, too much copper in the liver can
lead to symptoms such as jaundice and swelling of the
abdomen and, untreated, lead to acute liver failure,
a need for liver transplantation, or death. Many patients,
when diagnosed early on, respond well to the drugs that
help remove copper from the bloodstream. They must take
the medicine for the rest of their lives. There is an
acute form of Wilson’s disease in which the copper
overload is swift and the organ damage is rapid. In
these cases with liver failure, liver transplantation
is life-saving.
Bilary &
Pancreatic Conditions
Biliary Injury
Laparoscopic removal of the gall bladder has many benefits,
but one of its possible complications is injury to the
bile ducts. In as much as 1 percent of these procedures,
there is unintentional trauma to the bile ducts, which
may cause bile to leak or the bile ducts to become narrow
(bile duct stricture). There are other causes of bile
duct stricture, such as cancer, but people who have
persistent pain or discomfort 10-14 days after laparoscopic
gall bladder surgery might have had a bile duct injury
during the procedure. Some patients have fever or develop
jaundice related to the injury, as well.
Bile duct repair involves surgery that can be relatively
simple or complex; if infection has occurred, that must
be treated, also. The earlier a bile duct injury is
detected and repaired, the better. Over time, an untreated
injured duct will not drain properly, leading to a build-up
of bile in the liver.
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). This slow, progressive
disease affects the bile ducts both inside and outside
the liver. Inflammation and scarring cause the ducts
to narrow, and bile accumulates in the liver. Many times,
patients also have inflammatory bowel disease. Patients
with PSC have an increased risk of developing cancer
in the bile ducts. More common in men than in women,
PSC carries symptoms of itching, jaundice, fatigue and
bouts of fever. Sometimes blocked bile ducts can be
opened through surgery or other procedures, improving
the bile flow. When the ducts remain affected, liver
failure may occur after several years. Liver transplantation
is the only apparent cure.
Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is caused by chronic
inflammation of the bile ducts inside the liver, which
progressively destroy the bile ducts. It is an autoimmune
condition of unknown cause that leads to cirrhosis.
PBC has a long and protracted course of progression.
Some medicines are available for PBC in the early stages,
but when cirrhosis has set in and symptoms of liver
failure begin to show liver transplantation is the best
treatment option.
Cholangiocarcinoma
Cancer of the bile ducts, or cholangiocarcinoma, is
slow-growing, but also not usually diagnosed until it
is in an advanced stage. The malignant tumors block
the bile ducts, which causes jaundice. The best possible
treatment is to remove the tumor-containing bile ducts.
If the tumor is situated in the bile ducts as they come
out of the liver, removal of a portion of the liver
along with the bile duct may be required to remove the
tumor. Even if the tumors cannot be removed, there are
endoscopic and surgical techniques that can unblock
the obstructions. When surgery is not possible, radiation
either alone or with chemotherapy is a course of treatment.
Pancreatic Cancer
Cancer of the pancreas, the fourth leading cause of
cancer death in America, is typically aggressive, hard
to treat and metastasizes (spread) to other organs,
including the liver. In relatively few cases, a complex
surgery known as the Whipple procedure is performed
to remove the cancer. Most patients are not candidates
for the surgery and receive a combination of chemotherapy
and radiation. Unfortunately, the prognosis for patients
at this stage of the disease is very poor.
Pancreatic cancer can be very painful, so while there
might not be a cure in sight, there are procedures that
can help to keep the patient comfortable. For example,
the bile ducts of patients with pancreatic cancer can
become blocked, leading to jaundice and related lack
of appetite and itching. By stent placement, gastroenterologists
can open the blocked bile ducts and relieve the symptoms
of jaundice. To ease the pain of pancreatic cancer,
a celiac nerve block can be used to inject certain agents,
such as alcohol or a steroid, into the identified nerve
or nerves. The numbness brings pain relief that narcotic
medications cannot match.
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