Title: Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy
1Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy
2 CholestasisWhat 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)
3(No Transcript)
4Liver 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
5Pathophysiology
- 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
6Physiological ConsequencesThe 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)
7Intrahepatic 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 gt 10 x (Hay)
- Bilirubin lt 5mg/dL
- Total bile acids increase 100 fold
8Intrahepatic 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
9ICHP 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
10IHCPTherapy
- 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
11Summary
- 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
12Case Study
13What is the Problem
14Case study(Hay)
- 32 year old Para 1 _at_ 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
15Case 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
16Questions?
17Inherited and PediatricLiver Disease
18Inherited and Pediatric Liver Diseases
- Wilson Disease
- Hereditary hemochromatosis
- Alpha 1 Antitrypsin Deficiency
- Inborn errors of metabolism
- Fibrocystic diseases
- Pediatric cholestatic diseases
- Porphyria
19Wilson Disease
- Autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance
- Defective gene ATP7B on chromosome 13
- Leads to copper overload in liver, other organs
- World wide distribution
- Incidence 130,000
- Carrier state 190
- Higher in Sardinians and Chinese, infrequent in
Africa
20Wilson DiseaseVariable 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
21Wilson DiseaseVariable Presentation
- Neurological sequelae occur 2nd 3rd decade
- Increased or abnormal motor disorder w/
tremor/dystonia - Loss of movement w/ rigidity
- Psychiatric sequelae
- Depression
- Phobias
- Psychosis
22Wilson DiseaseOcular 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
23Wilson DiseaseInvolves 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
24Wilson DiseaseInvolves Other Organs
- Cardiomyopathy
- Muscles Rhabdomyolysis
- Pancreatitis
- Endocrine disorders
25Wilson DiseaseDiagnosis 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
26Wilson DiseaseTreatment
- 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
27Wilson Disease
- Prognosis is good on chelation therapy if
diagnosed promptly - Affected sibling diagnosed and treated prior to
symptom onset has the best prognosis
28Pediatric 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
29Pediatric 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 170,000
30Pediatric 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
31Case Study