Title: Anesthesia and the HepatoBiliary System
1Anesthesia and the HepatoBiliary System
- Courtesy of
- Gurdip Bhatia, MD
- Charles E. Smith, MD
- MetroHealth Medical Center
- Case Western Reserve University
- Cleveland, Ohio
2Objectives
- Hepatic Physiology
- Mechanisms of Hepatocellular Injury
- Acute Parenchymal Liver Disease
- Assessment of Liver Function
- Preoperative Considerations
- Intraoperative Considerations
3Objectives
- Chronic Parenchymal Liver Disease
- Preoperative Considerations
- Intraoperative Considerations
- Postoperative Liver Dysfunction
- Anesthetic Considerations
4Hepatic Physiology
- Liver Blood Flow
- 25 of Cardiac output
- Hepatic artery 25 of blood flow
- Portal vein 75 of blood flow
- Hepatic Veins empty into the inferior vena cava
5Splanchnic Circulation Fig 17.1
6Hepatic Microcirculation
- Portal Axis consists of a terminal portal venule,
a hepatic arteriole and a bile ductule - Liver Acinus functional microvascular unit
- Zone 1- rich in Oxygen, mitochondria
- Oxidative metabolism, synthesis of glycogen
- Zone 2- transition
- Zone 3- lowest in Oxygen, anaerobic metabolism,
Cytochrome P-450 - Biotransformation of drugs, chemicals, and toxins
- Most sensitive to damage due to ischemia,
hypoxia, congestion
7Microvascular Structure Fig 17.3
8Regulation of Liver Blood Flow
- Intrinsic Regulation
- Autoregulation
- Metabolic control
- Hepatic Arterial Buffer Response
- Decreases in portal blood flow causes increased
hepatic arterial blood flow - Extrinsic Regulation
- Neural Control
- Hormones
- Effects of Anesthesia
9Regulation of Liver Blood Flow
- Individual anesthetics
- Isoflurane and Sevoflurane preserve Hepatic blood
flow - Upper Abdominal Surgery
- Hepatic blood flow reduced by 60
- Regional Subarachnoid Block of T4
- Reduces 20 of Hepatic blood flow
10Functions of the Liver - I
- Metabolic
- Protein Albumin major protein, Coagulation
factors except Factor VIII - Carbohydrates Glucose homeostasis via
gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis - Lipids Degraded to Acetylcoenzyme, a key
molecule in synthesis of ATP, Cholesterol and
Phospholipids
11Functions of the Liver-II
- Bilirubin conjugation and secretion
- Bile formation
- Hematologic function
- Hematopoiesis 9th to 24th week gestation
- Clears Fibrin Degradation Products and Lactate
- Important in shock and massive blood loss and
transfusion
12Functions of the Liver-III
- Humoral function
- Insulin degraded 50 in the first pass
- T4 to T3 conversion
- Aldosterone, estrogen, androgen, ADH all are
inactivated by the liver - Liver disease thus, results in endocrine
abnormalities - Immunologic function
- Kupffer cells phagocytose antigens
13Functions of the Liver-IV
- Drug Biotransformation
- Make drugs more polar for efficient elimination
- Phase I Reaction
- Cytochrome P450 system
- Oxidation/reduction
- Mixed Function Oxidases
- Phase II Reaction
- Conjugation most commonly catalyzed by
UDP-glucuronyl transferase
14Factors Affecting Hepatic Drug Metabolism
- Drugs with high extraction ratio are affected
more by changes in HBF - Propranolol, Lidocaine, Meperedine
- Poorly extracted drugs are more sensitive to
intrinsic ability of the liver to eliminate a
drug - Diazepam, Phenytoin, Coumadin
- Anesthesia
- Ketamine induces its own metabolism, therefore
rapid tolerance can occur
15Evaluation of Liver Function
- Laboratory Tests
- ALT, AST, Alkaline phosphatase with
5-nucleotidase - Serum Albumin, Gamma-globulin
- PT (best estimate of hepatic function)
- Antinuclear Antibody
- Chronic Active Hepatitis 75
- Antimitochondrial antibody
- Primary biliary cirrhosis 100
- Radiologic Techniques
- Cholangiography, Radionuclide and Ultra sound
16Acute Viral Hepatitis
- Postpone elective surgery
- High mortality and morbidity
- Acute encephalopathy, avoid premed sedatives
- Frequent blood glucose monitoring for
hypoglycemia - Correction of Coagulopathy with Vit K, FFP and
platelet transfusion
17Algorithm for Abnormal Transaminase levels fig
54-1A
18Algorithm for Abnormal Transaminase levels fig
54-1B
19Algorithm for Abnormal Transaminase levels fig
54-1C
20Chronic Liver Diseaseor Cirrhosis PreOp
considerations
- Portal hypertension may lead to GI hemorrhage
- Rx Fluid resuscitation
- Must be done carefully to avoid rebleeding of
varices - Vasopressin and Octreotide constrict splanchnic
arteriolar bed
21Chronic Liver Disease PreOp
- Ascites is due to portal hypertension and sodium
retention that occurs with cirrhosis - Rx with Sodium and water restriction and
diuretics - Diuretics
- Cause hyponatremia and hyperkalemia
- Check and correct electrolytes
22Chronic Liver Disease /PreOp
- Paracentesis of Ascites
- Not exceed 1 Liter/day for a daily weight loss of
0.5 to 1.0 kg - 1 liter of ascites fluid contains 10 grams of
Albumin - Each liter of ascites removed must be replaced by
50 ml of 25 Albumin
23Chronic Liver Disease /PreOp
- Hepatorenal syndrome can be precipitated
- By aggressive paracentesis, potent diuretics like
Zaroxolyn - Avoid aminoglycosides (contraindicated), NSAIDS,
renal contrast, volume depletion - Hepatic Encephalopathy
- Dysarthria, flapping tremor, hyperreflexia
- Avoid long acting benzodiazepines, high dose
opiates and diuretics
24Chronic Liver Disease /PreOp
- Child-Turcotte-Pugh Classification
- Lab and clinical criteria to predict operative
survival in patients with Cirrhosis - Class C, Surgical risk of Mortality rate 50
- Serum bilirubin gt 3 mg/dl
- Albumin lt 3 g/dl
- PT gt 6 sec of control
- Ascites uncontrolled, encephalopathy advanced,
nutrition poor
25Chronic Liver Disease /IntraOp
- Optimum drugs or techniques are unknown
- Avoid or reduce dose of drugs excreted via the
liver such as Lidocaine, Meperidine, Morphine - Succinylcholine acceptable, effects are not
prolonged significantly - NDMB may have prolonged duration of action
- Atracurium may be better as it is eliminated by
Hoffman elimination - Vecuronium lt 0.6 mg/kg, Atracurium lt 0.15 mg/kg
- Avoid Pancuronium
26Chronic Liver Disease/IntraOp
- Most IV induction agents are metabolized by the
liver but recovery depends on redistribution.
Safe to use Propofol, Thiopental - For Inhalational agents, Isoflurane and
Sevoflurane are better than Halothane as Hepatic
Blood Flow is decreased to a lesser degree - Fentanyl and Sufentanil single dose bolus does
not change elimination half life - Remifentanil is a safer choice as it is degraded
by tissue and RBC Esterases
27Chronic Liver Disease/IntraOp
- Laparotomy with Abdominal Paracentesis of Ascites
- Maintain Intravascular volume,
- Rx with Albumin
- Patients with GI hemorrhage
- Receiving blood products may have decreased
clearance of Citrate which can lead to
hypocalcemia - Bleeding diathesis
- Rx with FFP or Prothrombin complex to correct PT
within 3 secs of normal - Transfuse if platelets lt 100,000/uL, Rx with
DDAVP
28PostOp Complications
- Reversible minor changes are common
- PostOp Jaundice may be due to hemolysis of
transfused blood - Shock Liver syndrome can occur if prolonged
hypotension persisted - Marked by severe hepato-cellular necrosis
- SerumTransaminases levels increased gt 10 fold
- Bleeding, Sepsis, Renal failure
29Summary-I
- Liver functions include
- Protein synthesis
- Drugs, fat and hormone metabolism
- Immunologic function
- Bilirubin formation and excretion
- Glucose homeostasis
30Summary-II
- For Acute Hepatitis
- Postpone all elective procedures as the
mortality rate is very high - For unexpected high Transaminase levels
- Repeat LFTs, if stable or decreasing may proceed
with surgery - Otherwise GI consult should be obtained
31Summary-III
- In Chronic Liver disease pre-op issues include
- GI hemorrhage
- Ascites, electrolyte imbalances
- Hypoglycemia,
- Coagulopathy and bleeding disorder
32Summary-IV
- In Chronic liver disease intra-operatively
- Avoid or reduce drugs that are eliminated by
liver - IV inductions agents are considered safe
- Inhalational agents
- Use Isoflurane, avoid Halothane
- Avoid Sevoflurane if risk of Hepato-Renal
Syndrome - Muscle Relaxants all are acceptable
- Vecuronium and Rocuronium have increased duration
of action
33Summary-V
- In Chronic liver disease intra-operatively
- Opioids can be used
- Maintain Intravascular volume
- Consider replacing 50 mL of 25 Albumin for
each liter of ascites fluid removed - Blood products can cause hypocalcemia and Calcium
need to be replaced
34Summary-VI
- Post-Op Liver dysfunctions
- Reversible minor changes are common
- Post op Jaundice may be due to hemolysis, but
other causes should be sought - Shock Liver syndrome presented by hepatocellular
necrosis can occur due to prolonged hypotension
35References
- Anesthesia, Fifth Edition/ Ronald D. Miller,
Hepatic Physiology, Chapter 17 Anesthesia and
the Hepatobiliary System, Chapter 54. - Anesthesia and Co-Existing Disease, Fourth
Edition/ Robert K Stoelting, Stephen F. Dierdorf,
Diseases of the Liver and Biliary Tract, Chapter
18. - Clinical Anesthesia, Fourth Edition/ Paul G.
Barash, et.al., Anesthesia and the Liver, Chapter
39