Cholestasis of Pregnancy - Michigan State University
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Transcript Cholestasis of Pregnancy - Michigan State University
Intrahepatic
Cholestasis of
Pregnancy
Rare
Cholestasis:
What Does it Mean?
Pathology:
Histological
demonstration of bile in liver tissue
Physiology: Measurable reduction in
hepatic secretion of solutes and
water
Biochemical: Demonstrable
accumulation in blood of substances
normally excreted in bile (bilirubin,
cholesterol, bile acids)
Liver Diseases in Pregnancy
High estrogen state:
– Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy
– Gallstones and sludge occur more frequently
Altered fatty acid metabolism:
– Acute fatty liver of pregnancy
Vascular diseases affect the liver:
– Pre-eclampsia
– HELLP Syndrome
Viral hepatitis:
– Vertical transmission of hepatitis B and C
Pathophysiology
Liver
is an estrogen sensitive organ
– Estrogen affects organic anion transport
(bilirubin, bile acids)
Bilirubin
excretion very mildly
impaired during normal pregnancy
Biliary phospholipids secretion may
be impaired (gene mutation,
estrogen effect)
Pregnancy is associated w/
decreases in GI motility, including
gall bladder motility
Physiological Consequences:
The Liver in Pregnancy
Pregnant
women more likely to
become jaundiced if cholestatic or
hepatocellular injury occur
Spider angiomata and palmar
erythema develop in up to 2/3
pregnancies due to effects of
estrogen and progesterone
Cholecystectomy generally safe
3rd Trimester see increased alk phos
2/2 developing placenta (not liver)
Intrahepatic Cholestasis of
Pregnancy (IHCP)
Incidence
0.1% - 1% of pregnancies
Recurrence in subsequent
pregnancies
Pruritis develops in late 2nd and 3rd
trimester
High transaminases - 40% > 10 x
(Hay)
Bilirubin < 5mg/dL
Total bile acids increase 100 fold
Intrahepatic Cholestasis of
Pregnancy (IHCP)
Pathogenesis:
genetic, hormonal
– Women who develop clinical cholestasis
during pregnancy or with oral
contraceptives likely have genetic
polymorphisms in the genes responsible
for bile formation and flow
– Familial - 10% occurrence in 1st degree
relatives
– Hormonal – timing in pregnancy, twins
ICHP Clinical Features
Pruritis
is the defining characteristic
About 50% develop jaundice
Disappears rapidly after delivery
Severity is variable
Rarely see a familial, progressive
course to cirrhosis
IHCP
Therapy
Ursodeoxycholic
acid 10mg-
10mg/Kg/day
Cholestyramine
Vitamin K p.r.n.
Reassurance and support
Consider early delivery in severe
cases
– Unbearable maternal pruritis or risk of
fetal distress/death
– Deliver at 38 weeks if mild, at 36 weeks
for severe cases – if jaundice
Summary
Normal
pregnancy is associated w/
characteristic, benign changes in
liver physiology
Several unique diseases occur during
pregnancy and all resolve following
delivery
Implications are disorder specific
Case Study
What is the Problem
Abnormal LFTs
Jaundice, pruritis,
abdominal pain,
and vomiting
Ultrasound
R/O Gallstones
Family Hx
Co-morbidities
Case study
(Hay)
32
year old Para 1 @ 24 weeks
– two weeks of severe pruritis
– Pruritis and abnormal LFTs in last
pregnancy
– Known gallstones – no biliary dilatation
on ultrasound
– No abdominal pain, fever, rash
– Exam normal apart from pregnancy
– AST 277 ALT 655 Bili 2.1 Alk Phos 286
Case Study
Hepatitis
A, B, C serologies non
reactive
Negative autoimmune markers
Urso 300 mg t.i.d. is prescribed
32 weeks - feels well; D/C Urso
33 weeks - pruritis - resume Urso
37 weeks - delivery healthy baby;
D/C Urso
2 weeks postpartum - LFTs normal
Questions?
Inherited and Pediatric
Liver Disease
A Brief Overview
Inherited and Pediatric Liver
Diseases
Wilson
Disease
Hereditary hemochromatosis
Alpha 1 Antitrypsin Deficiency
Inborn errors of metabolism
Fibrocystic diseases
Pediatric cholestatic diseases
Porphyria
Wilson Disease
Autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance
Defective gene: ATP7B on chromosome 13
Leads to copper overload in liver, other
organs
World wide distribution
Incidence 1:30,000
Carrier state 1:90
Higher in Sardinians and Chinese,
infrequent in Africa
Wilson Disease
Variable Presentation
Liver,
brain damage due to oxidative
stress
Age of onset between 6 to 45
May present as chronic liver disease
or acute liver failure, progressive
neurological disorder without liver
involvement or as a psychiatric
illness
Wilson Disease
Variable Presentation
Neurological
decade:
sequelae occur 2nd – 3rd
– Increased or abnormal motor disorder
w/ tremor/dystonia
– Loss of movement w/ rigidity
Psychiatric
sequelae
– Depression
– Phobias
– Psychosis
Wilson Disease
Ocular Features
Classic
finding: Kayser-Fleisher ring,
a golden-brown deposit at the outer
rim of the cornea
Sunflower cataract, less frequent.
Copper deposition in the lens
Wilson Disease
Involves Other Organs
Hemolytic
anemia 2/2 sporadic
release of copper into the blood
Renal involvement w/ Fanconi
syndrome, microscopic hematuria,
stones
Arthritis 2/2 copper deposit in
synovial joints
Osteoporosis, Vitamin D resistant
rickets 2/2 renal damage
Wilson Disease
Involves Other Organs
Cardiomyopathy
Muscles:
Rhabdomyolysis
Pancreatitis
Endocrine disorders
Wilson Disease
Diagnosis and Treatment
Lab
findings: Decreased
ceruloplasmin and serum copper,
excess urinary copper
24 hour urine x 3 to confirm
diagnosis
Histology: Hepatic copper deposition
Treatment is chelation:
– penicillamine, which increases urinary
copper excretion
– ammonium tetrathiomolybdate
Wilson Disease
Treatment
Zinc
interferes w/ copper binding,
decreasing absorption
Elimination of copper-rich foods from
the diet:
– Organ meats, shellfish, nuts, chocolate,
mushrooms
– Check drinking water supply
Liver
transplantation if ALF
Wilson Disease
Prognosis
is good on chelation
therapy if diagnosed promptly
Affected sibling diagnosed and
treated prior to symptom onset has
the best prognosis
Pediatric Cholestatic Syndromes
Neonatal
jaundice is common,
transient, usually due to immature
glucouronosyl transferase or to
breast feeding
If jaundice persists after 14 days,
investigate
Extrahepatic biliary atresia requires
urgent surgical repair of abnormal
hepatic or common bile ducts
Pediatric Cholestatic Syndromes
Neonatal
hepatitis 2/2 infection,
idiopathic
Intrauterine infections i.e., TORCH:
toxoplasmosis, rubella,
cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex
Alagille Syndrome – few bile ducts,
congenital heart disease, skeletal
abnormalities
– Autosomal dominant, Incidence:
1:70,000
Pediatric Cholestatic Syndromes
Progressive
Familial Intrahepatic
Cholestasis, another group of
autosomal recessive disorders
involved w/ errors in bile acid
synthesis and bile acid transport
– Byler Disease now called PFIC1
– Byler Syndrome now called PFIC 2
Case Study