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obstructive jaundice.pptx

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this is a presentation on how to approach a clinical case of obstructive jaundice, with emphasis on detailed clinical history taking, etiology, clinical examination, investigations necessary for jaundice like liver function test including varous parameters like total, indirect and direct billirubin,alkaline phosphatase ,serum proteins, coagulation profile, complete blood count, lipid profile, radiologicall investigations like ultrasound abdomen, contrast enhanced computed tomography, magnetic resonace imaging abdomen, magnetic resonance cholangio pancratogram, endoscopic cholangio pancratogram and the various treatment modalities available.

this is a presentation on how to approach a clinical case of obstructive jaundice, with emphasis on detailed clinical history taking, etiology, clinical examination, investigations necessary for jaundice like liver function test including varous parameters like total, indirect and direct billirubin,alkaline phosphatase ,serum proteins, coagulation profile, complete blood count, lipid profile, radiologicall investigations like ultrasound abdomen, contrast enhanced computed tomography, magnetic resonace imaging abdomen, magnetic resonance cholangio pancratogram, endoscopic cholangio pancratogram and the various treatment modalities available.

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obstructive jaundice.pptx

  1. 1. Approach to Obstructive jaundice DR Dhivya
  2. 2.  Failure of normal amount of bile to reach intestine due to mechanical obstruction of the extra hepatic biliary tree or within the porta hepatis  Total serum bilirubin is 0.3-1.2 mg/dl  With conjugated bilirubin<15 %
  3. 3.  Total bile flow-600ml/day(500- 1000ml/day)  Hepatocyte component is -450ml/day  bile salt dependent due to biliary glutathione and ductular bicarbonate secretion  Cholangiocyte component-150ml/day  It depends on secretin stimulation
  4. 4. PHYSIOLOGY OF OBSTRUCTION  Normal secretory pressure of bile is 15-25 cm of water  At 35 cm of water there is suppression of bile flow  High pressure leads to cholangiovenous and cholangiolymphatic reflux of bile  Dilatation of bile duct and intra hepatic biliary radicals(IHBR)  IHBR dilatation may be absent if there is secondary hepatic fibrosis or
  5. 5.  Increase in biliary pressure leads to  Disruption of tight junctions between hepatocytes and bile duct cells with increased permeability  Reflux of bile contents in liver sinusoids  Neutrophil infiltration,increased fibrinogenesis and deposition of reticulin fiberes in portal triad
  6. 6.  Reticulin fibers gets converted in to type 1 collagen  Laying down of collagen fibers leads to hepatic fibrosis obstruction of sinusoids and secondary biliary cirrhosis and portal hypertension  Fibrosis can also lead to atrophy of obstructed liver
  7. 7. CHANGES IN LIVER BLOOD FLOW  Acute obstruction  increase in hepatic arterial blood flow  No change in portal venous blood flow  Chronic obstruction  Decrease in total liver blood flow , dilatation of sinusoids and elevation of portal pressure
  8. 8. CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS  Decreased cardiac contractability  Reduced left ventricular pressure  Impaired response to beta agonist drug  Decreased peripheral vascular resistance  Bradycardia due to direct effect of bile salts on SA node.  Hypotension and more prone to postoperative shock
  9. 9. COAGULATION FACTOR DEFECTS  Prolongation of Prothrombin time  Loss of calcium  Endotoxin induced damage to factor XI XII platelets  Low grade DIC with increased fibrin degradation products  Thrombocytopenia from hypersplenism  Decreased absroption of fat solube vitamins A,D,E,K
  10. 10. ITCHING  Retained bile salts  Levels does not correlete well  Itching disappears in terminal liver failure but bile salt level still increased  Other theory -Due to endogenous opiate peptides  Induces opiod receptor mediated scratching activity of central origin
  11. 11. Mechanism of hyperbilirubinemia  Rise by 25-43 micromol/litre/day  Biliary venous & biliary regurgitation of conjugated bilirubin due to disruption of tight intracellular junction  Trans hepatocytic regurgitation due to reversal of the secretory polarity of hepatocytes  Rupture of dilated canaliculi in to sinusoids due to necrosis of hepatocytes
  12. 12. ALKALINE PHOSPHATSE  Most sensitive indicator  Factor responsible are  Biliary component regurgitation  Increase in hepatic synthesis
  13. 13. HISTORY  Jaundice- onset, course, itching  Pain  Pyrexia  Weight loss  Dark urine and clay coloured stools
  14. 14.  Travel to endemic area  History of abdominal operation  Drug intake ie ATT  History of injection in preceding six months
  15. 15. GENERAL EXAMINATION  Age  Anaemia - hemolysis, cancer , cirrhosis  Gross weight loss-malignancy  Hunched up position-chronic pancreatitis or ca pancreas  Skin changes-Bruising,purpuric spots,spider naevi,palmar erythema,white nails  loss of secondary sexual characters
  16. 16. ABDOMINAL EXAMINATION  Dilated peri umbilical veins  Ascitis  Courvoisier’s Law  Exceptions  Double impaction of stones  Impaction of pancreatic calculus at ampulla of vater  Mirizzi syndrome
  17. 17. BIOCHEMICAL INVESTIGATIONS  Routine investigations  ALP levels are elevated in nearly 100 % of patients with extra hepatic obstruction except in some cases of intermittent obstruction.  Values usually greater than 3 times the upper limit and can exceed 5 times the upper limit.  An elevation less than 3 times the upper limit is against complete extra hepatic obstruction.
  18. 18. ALT/AST  hepato cellular damage.  ALT found primarily in the liver, where as AST also found in heart ,kidney, skeletal muscle and brain  AST is less specific for liver function  ALT can confirm the hepatic origin of the less specific but more sensitive AST.  In extra hepatic obstruction usually AST levels are not elevated(< 10 times the upper reference limit)
  19. 19. GGTP  Correlates with ALP level  Most sensitive indicator of biliary tract disease  Better indicator of obstruction in children – levels are independent of age  Helpful in the diagnosis of acute biliary tract obstruction in contrast to ALP because ALP lags behind the onset of obstruction
  20. 20. 5- NUCLEOTIDASE  The principal value is to confirm the hepatic origin of an elevated ALP  This is particularly helpful in children, pregnant women and patients who may have bone disease resulting in rise of ALP  It is more useful than ALP/GGTP in detecting hepatic metastasis
  21. 21. Benjamin s Classification  TYPES OF BILIARY OBSTRUCTION  Complete obstruction  Intermittent obstruction  Chronic incomplete obstruction  Segmental obstruction
  22. 22. Type 1  Complete obstruction  Primary or secondary liver tumors  Pancreatic tumors  Cholangiocarcinoma  Iatrogenic ligation of CBD
  23. 23. Type 2  INTERMITTENT OBSTRUCTION  CBD stones  Periampullary tumours  Duodenal diverticulum  Choledochal cyst  Biliary parasites  hemobilia
  24. 24. Type 3  CHRONIC INCOMPLETE OBSTRUCTION  Strictures of CBD  Stenosis of biliary-enteric anastamosis  Chronic pancreatitis  Cystic fibrosis  Sphincter of oddi stenosis
  25. 25. Type 4  SEGMENTAL OBSTRUCTION  Traumatic  Intrahepatic stones  Sclerosing cholangitis  Cholangiocarcinoma
  26. 26. BILIARY OBSTRUCTION INTRINSIC  Calculi  Acute Cholangitis  Biliary Strictures  Sclerosing Cholangitis  Parasites  Haemobilia  Benign Biliary Tumours  Cholangiocarcinoma ,Carcinoma of ampulla of vater and Periampullary tumours
  27. 27. BILIARY OBSTRUCTION EXTRINSIC  Mirizzi syndrome  Pancreatitis- acute and chronic  Pancreatic pseudocyst  Carcinoma of gall bladder ,pancreas  Cystic tumours of pancreas  Metastatic carcinoma  Hepatocellular carcinoma
  28. 28. CONGENITAL AND GENETIC DISORDERS  Biliary atresia  Choledocal cyst  Caroli’s disease  Progressive familial intra hepatic cholestasis  Primary biliary cirrhosis  Alpha 1 antitrypsin defeciency  Tyrosinemia  Neonatal hepatitis  Wilson disease  dyskinesia of sphincter of odi
  29. 29. IMAGING  GOALS  To confirm the presence of an extrahepatic obstruction  To determine the level of the obstruction, to identify the specific cause of the obstruction  To provide additional information relating to the underlying diagnosis (eg., Staging in case of malignancy).
  30. 30. Ultrasound  initial screening test  high specificity (>98%) and sensitivity (>95%) for the diagnosis of cholelithiasis  Dilation of the extrahepatic (>10 mm) or intrahepatic (>4 mm) bile ducts suggests biliary obstruction
  31. 31. MRCP  Fluid found in the biliary tree is hyper intense on T2-weighted images  determine the extent and type of tumor  detect malignant hilar and perihilar obstruction  Absolute contraindications
  32. 32. EUS  Higher-frequency ultrasonic waves compared to traditional US (3.5 mhz vs 20 mhz)  98% diagnostic accuracy in obstructive jaundice  sensitivity of EUS for focal mass lesions in pancreas has been reported to be superior to that of CT particularly for tumors smaller than 3 cm in diameter.
  33. 33.  Compared to MRCP for the diagnosis of biliary stricture, EUS is more specific (100% vs 76%) and has a greater positive predictive value (100% vs 25%) although the two have equal sensitivity (67%)  The positive yield of eus-fna for cytology in malignant obstruction has been reported to be as high as 96%

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