Diseases of the liver and biliary tract


Epidemiology

Nearly 4.5 million people in the United States are living with chronic liver disease, while more than 40,000 deaths annually are attributed to chronic liver disease. Liver dysfunction affects multiple organ systems and increases the risk of perioperative morbidity and mortality. While the prevalence of chronic viral infections has decreased due to improvements in medical treatments, the prevalence of alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) continues to rise. Regardless of etiology, patients with liver dysfunction are undergoing nonhepatic surgeries, presenting unique challenges to the anesthesiologist.

Functions of the liver

The liver plays an essential role in numerous metabolic and physiologic processes ( Table 16.1 ). Nearly every organ system has the potential to be negatively impacted by liver dysfunction, given the liver’s central role in metabolism of nutrients and drugs. Patients with liver disease are at higher risk of perioperative morbidity and mortality due to failure of one or more of these essential functions, hypoperfusion, tissue ischemia, and further activation of the systemic inflammatory response, leading to multiorgan failure.

TABLE 16.1
Functions of the Liver
Function Description
Synthesis of glucose and glycogen Regulates blood glucose by producing, storing, and releasing glucose when needed
Synthesis of cholesterol and proteins Provides support and aids in biosynthesis of hormones and vitamins
Metabolism of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates Generates energy for homeostatic processes to occur
Metabolism of drugs Cytochrome P450 enzymes in the liver deactivate or bioactivate drugs to a form that can be used by the body
Detoxification of blood Clears harmful substances in the blood such as bacteria and toxins
Digestion of food Produces bile to break down fats, vitamins, and minerals
Synthesis of acute phase reactants for immune support Help to surmount and stimulate an immune response
Processes hemoglobin and stores iron Regulates blood iron concentrations by increasing and decreasing the storage of iron as needed
Synthesis of coagulation factors and plasma proteins Helps to regulate hemostasis
Assistance with volume control by blood reservoir function Reservoir function allows release of blood during hypovolemia or acute blood loss

One of the liver’s major functions is to filter and transform substances from the blood. Nutrients and other substances from the digestive system enter the liver via the portal vein before undergoing metabolism. This process not only allows for blood to be cleared of harmful chemicals and bacteria but also allows for breakdown of drugs via oxidation and reduction processes. When portal hypertension is present, portosystemic shunts arise that allow blood to bypass the metabolic and detoxification process, leading to hepatic encephalopathy, increased risk for sepsis, and alterations in drug biotransformation.

Hemostasis in liver dysfunction is complex and unique given the concurrent risk for bleeding and thrombosis. The liver synthesizes most coagulation factors and proteins involved in fibrinolysis, along with the hormone thrombopoietin. Although patients may have laboratory tests suggestive of a hypocoagulable state, they are often in a state of hemostatic balance due to changes in both the procoagulant and anticoagulant pathways. This state is often unstable, making the patient at risk for both bleeding and thrombosis.

Liver anatomy

The liver receives the highest proportion of cardiac output of all the organs in the body: approximately 25% via the portal vein and hepatic artery. The portal vein, which is formed by the confluence of the splenic and superior mesenteric veins, provides 75% of blood flow to the liver. However, it accounts for only 50% of oxygen delivery given the portal venous blood’s deoxygenated state after perfusing organs such as the stomach, intestines, spleen, and pancreas. The hepatic artery provides the remaining 25% of liver blood flow and 50% of oxygen delivery due to its higher oxygen content. Fig. 16.1 describes the pressure gradient of blood flow to the liver. Anatomically, the liver is divided into eight segments ( Fig. 16.2 ).

Fig. 16.1, Hepatic blood flow. The high-pressure hepatic arterial blood mixes with the low-pressure portal venous blood as the two vascular systems merge in the low-pressure hepatic sinusoids. This pressure gradient allows forward flow of blood through the liver.

Fig. 16.2, Anatomic segments of the liver. Couinaud’s classification system divides the liver into eight segments, each with their own vascular inflow, outflow, and biliary drainage. The three hepatic veins divide the liver into four vertical sectors: right posterior, right anterior, left medial, and left lateral.

Blood flow to the liver is regulated by intrinsic and extrinsic mediators. Hepatic arterial flow has an inverse relationship with changes in portal venous flow. Mediated by adenosine, hepatic artery dilation occurs as portal venous flow decreases. This helps maintain blood flow and oxygen content in the liver. This autoregulation is a one-way mechanism as the portal vein cannot dilate in response to decreased hepatic artery flow. Extrinsic factors, such as sympathetic innervation, regulate blood flow through the portal vein indirectly by modulating arterial tone in the splanchnic vessels. Portal venous pressure therefore reflects both splanchnic arterial tone and intrahepatic resistance to flow. When portal venous pressure is elevated, portosystemic shunts are formed from tributaries that allow portal venous blood to bypass the liver and flow directly to the systemic circulation, leading to the development of esophageal and gastric varices. Portal hypertension is considered present when the hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG [difference between wedged hepatic venous pressure and free hepatic venous pressure]) exceeds 10 mm Hg. HVPG is commonly used to predict the risk and severity of portal hypertension ( Fig. 16.3 ).

Fig. 16.3, Hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) is commonly used as a surrogate for portal venous pressure measurement. HVPG is used to predict the risk and severity of portal hypertension.

Assessment of liver function

Evaluation of liver function should be guided by a careful history that considers risk factors for liver disease, severity of clinical findings, and presence of comorbidities. Risk factors for liver disease include family history, heavy alcohol usage, lifestyle, diabetes, obesity, intravenous drug use, tattoos, prior transfusion, and use of medications that can cause hepatotoxicity. Specific questions regarding chronic fatigue, pruritis, easy bleeding/bruising, volume overload, changes in weight, and dark urine should be asked. The physical exam findings may reveal jaundice, ascites, asterixis, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, or spider nevi. Patients may present without any physical exam findings.

When liver dysfunction is suspected, laboratory workup begins with a liver chemistry panel, complete blood count, and prothrombin time (PT)/international normalized ratio (INR). These tests help confirm clinical suspicion and include biomarkers of hepatobiliary disease that can be divided into three different groups: markers of hepatocellular injury or inflammation, cholestasis, and synthetic function. Table 16.2 lists common causes of hepatic dysfunction and correlating test results.

TABLE 16.2
Causes of Hepatic Dysfunction Based on Liver Chemistry Test Results
Hepatic Dysfunction Bilirubin Aminotransferase Enzymes Alkaline Phosphatase Causes
Prehepatic Increased unconjugated fraction Normal Normal Hemolysis
Hematoma resorption
Bilirubin overload from blood transfusion
Intrahepatic (hepatocellular) Increased conjugated fraction Markedly increased Normal to slightly increased Viral infection
Drugs
Alcohol
Sepsis
Hypoxemia
Cirrhosis
Posthepatic (cholestatic) Increased conjugated fraction Normal to slightly increased Markedly increased Biliary tract stones or tumors
Sepsis

Hepatocellular injury and inflammation are reflected by increased serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT), found in high concentrations in hepatocytes. Since AST and ALT are also present in skeletal and cardiac muscle, correlation with creatine kinase can be useful for discriminating extrahepatic causes. Liver disease processes can have distinctive patterns of enzyme elevations. Acute liver failure (ALF) secondary to medication use often results in AST and ALT levels more than 25 times greater than normal. ALD will usually have an AST:ALT ratio of at least 2:1, while nonalcoholic steatohepatitis will often have an AST:ALT ratio of 1:1. Although liver chemistry elevations can be suggestive of certain disease processes, they are not always specific.

Alkaline phosphatase, γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT), and bilirubin are used to assess for cholestasis. Alkaline phosphatase is an enzyme found in the biliary system and within bone, intestines, and the placenta. Elevation can indicate issues with the bile duct, pregnancy, or bone disease, thus clinical correlation is needed to assist with the appropriate diagnosis. GGT is an enzyme highly concentrated in the liver that is more specific for biliary disease compared to alkaline phosphatase. The level of bilirubin, the end product of heme catabolism, is a function of uptake, conjugation, and excretion by the liver. Bilirubin that is bound to albumin in the blood is known as indirect bilirubin. It is transported to the liver where it is conjugated to a water-soluble form, known as direct bilirubin, before secretion into the small intestine as bile. Elevated indirect bilirubin can be caused by prehepatic disorders such as hemolysis, ineffective erythropoiesis, medications, and portosystemic shunts. Elevated direct bilirubin can be caused by biliary obstruction, cholestasis, hepatocellular injury, and disorders such as Dubin-Johnson syndrome.

Synthetic function of the liver is indicated by albumin and PT/INR. Albumin is a plasma protein synthesized in the liver that acts as a primary modulator of plasma oncotic pressure and as a transporter for drugs. Synthesis of albumin is reduced with liver disease. PT is a test that evaluates the extrinsic and common pathway of the coagulation cascade to measure how long it takes for a thrombus to form. PT requires factors II, V, VII, and X, and therefore is prolonged with advanced liver disease due to any etiologic factor.

Liver imaging includes a variety of techniques. Imaging usually begins with ultrasound evaluation. Ultrasound can be used to assess liver size and nodularity, biliary tree anatomy, spleen size, and presence of hepatic masses. It can also detect ascites in its earliest stages (≥100 mL). Doppler ultrasound imaging can be used for assessment of portal venous patency and direction of portal flow. Computed tomography (CT) scan or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used for further evaluation of hepatobiliary anatomy and for exclusion of other intraabdominal processes.

Diseases of the biliary tract

Biliary tract anatomy

The biliary system consists of the gallbladder, bile ducts, and structures involved in the production, storage, and transport of bile. Hepatocytes secrete bile (composed of water, bilirubin, bile salts, and cholesterol) into small ducts that form the common hepatic duct. Between meals, secreted bile is stored in the gallbladder. During a meal, the gallbladder contracts to secrete bile into the duodenum and aid in digestion of fats. Fig. 16.4 shows anatomy of the biliary tree.

Fig. 16.4, Anatomy of the biliary tract. Bile flows out of the liver via the right and left hepatic ducts, which drain into the common hepatic duct. The common hepatic duct then joins with the cystic duct from the gallbladder before entering the duodenum. Not all bile runs directly into the duodenum. Half of the bile produced by the liver is first stored in the gallbladder.

Cholelithiasis

Cholelithiasis occurs when substances in bile become hardened within the gallbladder. This can occur for several reasons: cholesterol oversecretion, excess bilirubin, or gallbladder hypomotility. Risk factors for gallstones include obesity, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, pregnancy, family history, and female gender. Nearly 80% of patients with cholelithiasis are asymptomatic. Symptomatic patients may have right upper quadrant pain or referred pain to the shoulders, nausea, vomiting, and indigestion. Acute cholecystitis occurs when a gallstone obstructs the cystic duct causing the gallbladder to become distended and inflamed. The patient may present with fever, pain in the right upper quadrant, and tenderness over the gallbladder. Management of these patients initially includes intravenous (IV) fluids, antibiotics, and pain management. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is performed once the patient is medically optimized and stable. If the patient develops septic shock, a percutaneous cholecystostomy may be warranted, given the tenuous preoperative status. Anesthetic considerations should include the risk of opioid use and resultant sphincter of Oddi spasm. The risk of opioid-induced sphincter of Oddi spasm is low and can be antagonized using drugs such as glucagon, naloxone, or nitrate drugs.

Choledocholithiasis

Choledocholithiasis is a complication of cholelithiasis in which a gallstone obstructs the common bile duct impeding the flow of bile from the liver to the duodenum. Patients often present with symptoms of biliary colic suggested by intermittent episodes of nausea, vomiting, and crampy right upper quadrant pain. Common bile duct obstruction can lead to cholangitis, which is associated with fever, rigors, and jaundice in addition to the abovementioned symptoms. Treatment involves surgical or endoscopic removal of the obstruction. The most common method is preoperative endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) to identify the stone followed by endoscopic sphincterotomy to remove it. Laparoscopic exploration of the common bile duct may also be performed concurrently with cholecystectomy.

Hyperbilirubinemia

Hyperbilirubinemia can be divided into two categories based on whether it is conjugated. Unconjugated (indirect) hyperbilirubinemia results from an imbalance between synthesis and catabolism of bilirubin. Conjugated (direct) hyperbilirubinemia results from reflux of direct or conjugated bilirubin into the blood following biliary obstruction. Table 16.3 lists causes of hyperbilirubinemia.

TABLE 16.3
Causes of Hyperbilirubinemia
Unconjugated (Indirect)
Physiologic jaundice of newborn
Jaundice of prematurity
Hemoglobin disorders (i.e., sickle cell anemia, thalassemia)
Hemolysis (i.e., immune mediated, hereditary)
Hereditary defects in conjugation (i.e., Gilbert syndrome, Crigler-Najjar syndrome)
Red blood cell enzyme disorders (i.e., glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency)
Drug induced
Sepsis
Conjugated (Direct)
Intrahepatic cholestasis
Hepatocellular injury (hepatitis, cirrhosis, drugs)
Congenital infections
Benign postoperative jaundice
Dubin-Johnson syndrome
Rotor syndrome
Obstructive jaundice
Biliary atresia

Gilbert syndrome

Gilbert syndrome is a benign, autosomal dominant inherited disorder that results in unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Activity of the enzyme, uridine diphosphoglucuronate glucuronosyltransferase (UGT1A1), is decreased, resulting in mildly elevated indirect bilirubin levels. Patients may report jaundice, fatigue, or abdominal discomfort that is precipitated by dehydration, exercise, fasting, or stress. Symptoms typically resolve spontaneously. Plasma indirect bilirubin is only mildly elevated.

Crigler-Najjar syndrome

Crigler-Najjar syndrome is one of the most severe, albeit rare, forms of inherited unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. It is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern and characterized by either no or very little expression of the enzyme UGT1A1. Shortly after birth, affected infants develop signs of severe jaundice, fever, and vomiting. If untreated, the hyperbilirubinemia can result in severe brain damage. Diagnosis is made by high serum concentrations of indirect bilirubin. Treatment includes daily exchange transfusions, 12 hours /day phototherapy, and heme oxygenase inhibitors. Oral calcium phosphate is often used to bind bilirubin in the gut. Phenobarbital can be used in specific forms of the syndrome. Curative treatment is liver transplantation before the onset of brain damage.

Benign postoperative intrahepatic cholestasis

Benign postoperative intrahepatic cholestasis is postoperative jaundice in which there is no hepatic inflammation or cell necrosis. The cause is often multifactorial and associated with hypotension, significant blood loss, multiple transfusions, or hypoxemia. Bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase levels can increase two- to fourfold within the first 7 to 10 days following surgery. The diagnosis is made after excluding other causes. Although the jaundice may appear severe and dramatic, the condition is generally self-limited.

Hepatitis

Viral hepatitis

Viral hepatitis is most commonly caused by hepatitis A (HAV), B (HBV), C (HCV), D (HDV), and E (HEV) viruses. Each of these can cause acute infections with the potential for substantial morbidity. HBV and HCV are associated with significant chronic sequelae, while HAV lacks a chronic stage and contributes only to acute infection. Table 16.4 lists characteristic features of the various viral hepatitides. Of those, HAV and HEV rarely result in chronic liver disease and infrequently lead to liver transplantation. Both HBV and HCV remain a common reason for liver transplantation in developing countries, while HCV remains the most common viral hepatitis leading to liver transplantation in the United States. Advances in antiviral therapies over the last decade have revolutionized management of HCV disease. Current treatment regimens typically include two direct-acting antiviral drugs that target specific steps within the HCV replication cycle with or without interferon for a duration of 8 to 12 weeks. Antiviral drug choice and treatment duration are based on the genotype of HCV, stage of liver disease, presence of cirrhosis, and previous response to interferon. Genotype 1 is the most common, accounting for 70% to 75% of all HCV infections in the United States. One of the recommended medication regimens for genotype 1 is a 12-week course of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir, which has been found to provide a rate of infection clearance of 98% in genotype 1A and 99% in genotype 1B. Duration of drug therapy is heavily dependent on history of prior therapy and severity of liver disease.

TABLE 16.4
Characteristic Features of Viral Hepatitis
Adapted from Keefe EB. Acute hepatitis. Sci Am Med. 1999:1–9.
Parameter Type A Type B Type C Type D Type E
Mode of transmission Fecal-oral, sewage-contaminated water or shellfish Transfusions, percutaneous, sexual, perinatal Transfusions, percutaneous, sexual, perinatal Percutaneous Fecal-oral, contaminated water
Incubation period 20–37 days 60–110 days 35–70 days 60–110 days 15–60 days
Results of serum antigen and antibody tests IgM early, IgG appears during convalescence HBsAg and anti-HBcAg early and persist in carriers Anti-HCV in 6 wk to 9 mo Anti-HDV late; may be short lived IgM early, IgG appears shortly afterwards
Course Acute, does not progress to chronic liver disease Chronic liver disease develops in 1–5% of adults and 80–90% of children Chronic liver disease develops in up to 75% Coinfection with type B Usually acute, may cause chronic liver disease in those with weakened immune systems
Prevention after exposure Pooled γ-globulin, hepatitis A vaccine Hepatitis B immunoglobulin, hepatitis B vaccine Two protease inhibitors +/– interferon Unknown Ribavirin in immunocompromised
Mortality <0.3–0.6% 0.3–1.5% Unknown Acute icteric hepatitis: 2–20% 1%, 10–30% among pregnant women
HBcAg, Hepatitis B core antigen; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HDV, hepatitis D virus; IgG, immunoglobulin G; IgM, immunoglobulin M.

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