Transcript hepatitis

The digestive system
I-The digestive system
Digestion
 Digestion is the mechanical and chemical
breaking down of food into smaller components
that can be absorbed into a blood stream
 Digestion is a form of catabolism: a break-down
of larger food molecules to smaller ones.
Digestive system
 In mammals, food enters the mouth, being chewed by
teeth, with chemical processing beginning with
chemicals in the saliva from the salivary glands.
 Then it travels down the esophagus into the stomach,
where hydrochloric acid kills most contaminating
microorganisms and begins mechanical break down of
some food (e.g., denaturation of protein), and chemical
alteration of some.
 After some time (typically an hour or two in humans, the
results go through the small intestine, through the large
intestine, and are excreted during defecation.
other terms
Lith/o
Stone
Lapar/o
Abdominal wall
Iasis (-osis)
Abnormal condition
Emes/o Emesis
Vomit
Melan/o
Black pigment
Scopy
Technique of veiwing
Rraphy
Suture
Ectasis
Dialation
- pepsia
Digestion
Phagia
Eating/Swallowing
Atresia
no opening
-ptosis
drooping /sagging
-stomy
 This means a mouth or opening. Usually a stoma is formed by
surgery
 e.g. a colostomy is an opening or the formation of an opening
into the colon.
 This word component is also used in anastomosis, an operation
to form an opening/communication between two parts.
 A stoma can be temporary or permanent.
-tomy
 Means an incision as at the beginning of an operation
.
Related terms
Gast/ritis
inflammation of stomach
Gastr/o/enteritis
Inflammation of the stomach and intestine
Gastr/ectomy
Excision of stomach
Hepat/itis
inflammation of liver
Hepat/oma
tumor of liver
Laparo/tomy
cutting into the abdomen
Laparo/scopy
visual exam of the abdomen
Related terms
Chole/litho/tomy
removal of gall stones
Chole/lith/iasis
gall stones causing symptoms
Chole/cystitis
inflammation of gallbladder
Chole/cystectomy
removal of gallbladder
Emetic
stimulating vomiting
Anti/emetic
stopping vomiting
Related terms
 Lymph/angi/ectasis
Dialation of a lymph vessel
 Dys/pepsia
Difficult digestion
 Dys/phagia
Difficulty in swallowing
 Splen/o/rrhagia
Bursting forth of blood from the spleen
 Sialo/lithiasis
Salivary stones
 Hemat/emesis
Vomiting of blood
Clinical Aspects of Digestion
INFECTION
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A variety of organisms can infect the gastrointestinal tract,
from viruses and bacteria to protozoa and worms.

Some produce short-lived upsets with gastroenteritis,
nausea, diarrhea, and emesis (vomiting).

Others, such as typhoid, cholera, and dysentery, are more
serious, even fatal.
ULCERS
 An ulcer is a lesion of the skin or a mucous membrane marked
by inflammation and tissue damage.
 Ulcers caused by the damaging action of gastric, or peptic,
juices on the lining of the GI tract are termed peptic ulcers.
 Most peptic ulcers appear in the first portion of the duodenum.
 The origins of such ulcers are not completely known, although
infection with a bacterium, Helicobacter pylori, has been
identified as a major cause.
CANCER
 The most common sites for cancer of the GI
tract are the colon and rectum.
APPENDICITIS
 Appendicitis results from infection of the
appendix, often secondary to its obstruction.
Surgery is necessary to avoid rupture and
peritonitis, infection of the peritoneal cavity.
INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE
 Two similar diseases are included under the heading
of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD):
 Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis, both of which
occur mainly in adolescents and young adults.
 Crohn disease is a chronic inflammation of segments
of the intestinal wall, usually in the ileum, causing
pain, diarrhea, abscess, and often formation of an
abnormal passageway, or fistula.
 Ulcerative colitis involves a continuous inflammation
of the lining of the colon and usually the rectum.
PANCREATITIS
 Pancreatitis, or inflammation of the pancreas,
may result from alcohol abuse, drug toxicity,
bile obstruction, infections, and other causes.
 Blood tests in acute pancreatitis show
increased levels of the enzymes amylase and
lipase.
GALLSTONES
 Cholelithiasis refers to the presence of stones in the gallbladder or bile
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ducts, which is usually associated with cholecystitis, inflammation of
the gallbladder.
Most of these stones are composed of cholesterol, an ingredient of bile.
Gallstones form more commonly in women than in men, especially in
women on oral contraceptives and in those who have had several
pregnancies.
The condition is characterized by biliary colic (pain) in the right upper
quadrant (RUQ), nausea, and vomiting.
Drugs may be used to dissolve gallstones, but often the cure is removal
of the gallbladder in a cholecystectomy.
This procedure was originally performed through a major abdominal
incision, but now the gallbladder is almost always removed
laparoscopically
through a small incision in the abdomen.
Ultrasonography and radiography are used for diagnosis of gallstones.
HEPATITIS
 Hepatitis is a disease that includes any type of inflammation of the
liver, the result of a complex process that occurs when the liver suffers
an injury.
 Doctors call the inflammation that lasts less than six months acute
hepatitis and inflammation that lasts longer than six months chronic
hepatitis.
 While there are many causes of liver inflammation, clinicians divide
them into two main categories: viral hepatitis and non-infectious
hepatitis
viral hepatitis
 When most people think of hepatitis, they're usually
thinking about viral hepatitis.
 There are five viruses that commonly infect the liver,
named using letters of the alphabet -- A through E.
What makes viral hepatitis confusing is that each one
of these viruses causes a slightly different type of
disease and has a different way of spreading.
 Some of these viral infections can result in acute,
chronic or both forms of hepatitis.
 Since these viruses spread from person to person,
doctors also call this type of hepatitis infectious
hepatitis.
Non-Infectious Hepatitis
 Chemicals such as alcohol or medications can be
harmful to the liver and can cause inflammation.
 In addition, other health problems like genetic and
metabolic disorders, immune-related injury and obesity,
can damage the liver and lead to inflammation.
 Since these types of hepatitis cannot spread from one
person to another, clinicians call it non-infectious
hepatitis.
CIRRHOSIS
 Cirrhosis is a chronic liver disease characterized by
hepatomegaly, edema, ascites, and jaundice.
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As the disease progresses there is splenomegaly, internal
bleeding, and brain damage caused by changes in the
composition of the blood.
 A complication of cirrhosis is increased pressure in the portal
system that brings blood from the abdominal organs to the liver,
a condition called portal hypertension.
 The main cause of cirrhosis is the excess consumption of
alcohol.
 Bilirubin
A pigment released in the breakdown of
hemoglobin from red blood cells; mainly
excreted by the liver in bile
 Icterus
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Jaundice
 Jaundice

A yellowish color of the skin, mucous
membranes, and whites of the eye caused by
bile pigments in the blood (from French jaune
meaning“yellow”). The main pigment is bilirubin.
Other conditions
 Esophageal atresia
no opening of the esophaagus at birth
 Cecostomy
new opening of the first part of the colon to the outside
 Jejunoje/junostomy
New opening between two parts of the jejunum
 Pyloric Stenosis
Narrowing of the opening between the stomach and
intestine
 Colic
 Acute abdominal pain, such as biliary colic
caused by gallstones in the bile ducts
Paracentesis
 Collection
of peritoneal fluid
 Anorexia
 Loss of appetite. Anorexia nervosa is a
psychologically induced refusal or inability to eat
 Constipation
 Infrequency or difficulty in defecation and the
passage of hard, dry feces.
Endoscopy
Use of a fiberoptic endoscope for direct visual examination.
GI studies include
 Esophagogastroduodenoscopy
 Proctosigmoidoscopy (rectum and distal colon)
 Colonoscopy (all regions of the colon)
 Gastroscopy (stomach)
Gastroscopy
Liver Function Tests
•
The routine liver function tests include the
measurement of :
1.
Total , direct and indirect bilirubin
2.
Total proteins and albumin
3.
Liver enzymes include :
 ALT ( Alanine transaminase )
 AST ( Aspartate transaminase )
 AlP ( Alkaline phosphatase )
 GGT (  - Glutamyl transferase )