Cirrhosis
What Is Cirrhosis?
The liver weighs about 3 pounds and is the largest organ in the
body. It is located in the upper right side of the abdomen, below
the ribs (see figure below). When chronic diseases cause the liver
to become permanently injured and scarred, the condition is called
cirrhosis. The scar tissue that forms in cirrhosis harms the structure
of the liver, blocking the flow of blood through the organ. The
loss of normal liver tissue slows the processing of nutrients, hormones,
drugs, and toxins by the liver. Also, the production of proteins
and other substances made by the liver is suppressed.
What Is The Impact Of Cirrhosis?
Cirrhosis is the seventh leading cause of death by disease. About
25,000 people die from cirrhosis each year. There also is a great
toll in terms of human suffering, hospital costs, and the loss of
work by people with cirrhosis.
What Are The Major Causes Of Cirrhosis?
Cirrhosis has many causes. In the United States, chronic alcoholism
is the most common cause. Cirrhosis also may result from chronic
viral hepatitis (types B and C). Liver injury that results in cirrhosis
also may be caused by a number of inherited diseases such as cystic
fibrosis, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, hemochromatosis, Wilson's
disease.
If a person's bile duct becomes blocked, this also may cause cirrhosis.
The bile ducts carry bile formed in the liver to the intestines,
where the bile helps in the digestion of fat. In adults, the bile
ducts may become inflamed, blocked, and scarred due to another liver
disease, primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and primary sclerosing
cholangitis (PSC).
Other, less common, causes of cirrhosis are prolonged exposure
to environmental toxins, fats in the liver (steatohepatitis), and
repeated bouts of heart failure with liver congestion.
What Are The Symptoms Of Cirrhosis?
People with cirrhosis often have few symptoms at first. The person
may experience fatigue, weakness, and exhaustion. Loss of appetite
is usual, often with nausea and weight loss.
As liver function declines, less protein is made by the organ.
For example, less of the protein albumin is made, which results
in water accumulating in the legs and the abdomen (ascites). A decrease
in proteins needed for blood clotting makes it easy for the person
to bruise, bleeding or infection.
In the later stages of cirrhosis, jaundice (yellow skin) may occur,
caused by the buildup of bile pigment that is passed by the liver
into the intestines. Some people with cirrhosis experience intense
itching due to bile products that are deposited in the skin.
The liver of a person with cirrhosis also has trouble removing
toxins, which may build up in the blood. These toxins can dull mental
function and lead to personality changes and even coma (encephalopathy).
Early signs of toxin accumulation in the brain may include neglect
of personal appearance, unresponsiveness, forgetfulness, trouble
concentrating, or changes in sleeping habits.
Drugs taken usually are filtered out by the liver, and this cleansing
process also is slowed down by cirrhosis. The liver does not remove
the drugs from the blood at the usual rate, so the drugs act longer
than expected, building up in the body. People with cirrhosis often
are very sensitive to medications and their side effects.
A serious problem for people with cirrhosis pressure on blood vessels
that flow through the liver. Normally blood from the intestines
and spleen is pumped to the liver through the portal vein. But in
cirrhosis, this normal flow of blood is slowed, building pressure
in the portal vein (portal hypertension). This blocks the normal
flow of blood, causing the spleen to enlarge. So blood from the
intestines tries to find away around the liver through new vessels.
Some of these new blood vessels become quite large and are called
varices. These vessels may form in the stomach and esophagus (the
tube that connects the mouth with the stomach). They have thin walls
and carry high pressure. There is great danger that they may break,
causing a serious bleeding, problem in the upper stomach or esophagus.
If this happens, the patient's life is in dancer, and the doctor
must act quickly to stop the bleeding.
How Is Cirrhosis Diagnosed?
The doctor often can diagnose cirrhosis from the patient's symptoms
and from laboratory tests. During a physical exam, the doctor could
notice a change in how your liver feels or how large it is. If the
doctor suspects cirrhosis, you will be given blood tests. The purpose
of these tests is to find out if liver disease is present. In some
cases, other tests that take pictures of the liver are performed
such as the computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan, and ultrasound.
The doctor may decide to confirm the diagnosis by putting a needle
through the skin (biopsy) to take a sample of tissue from the liver.
In some cases, cirrhosis is diagnosed during surgery when the doctor
is able to see the entire liver. The liver also can be inspected
through a laparoscope, a viewing device that is inserted through
a tiny incision in the abdomen.
What Are The Treatments For Cirrhosis?
Treatment of cirrhosis is aimed at stopping or delaying its progress,
minimizing the damage to liver cells, and reducing complications.
In alcoholic cirrhosis, for instance, the person must stop drinking
alcohol to halt progression of the disease. If a person has hepatitis,
the doctor may administer steroids or antiviral drugs to reduce
liver cell injury.
Medications may be given to control the symptoms of cirrhosis,
such as itching. Edema and ascites (fluid retention) are treated
by reducing salt in the diet. Drugs called diuretics are used to
remove excess fluid and to prevent edema from recur-ring.
Diet and drug therapies can help to improve the altered mental
function that cirrhosis can cause. For instance, decreasing dietary
protein results in less toxin formation in the digestive tract.
Laxatives such as lactulose may be given to help absorb toxins and
speed their removal from the intestines.
The two main problems in cirrhosis are liver failure, when liver
stops working, and the bleeding caused by portal hypertension.
The doctor may prescribe blood pressure medication, such as a beta-blocker,
to treat the portal hypertension. If the patient bleeds from the
varices of the stomach or esophagus, the doctor can band these veins
through a flexible tube (upper endoscopy) that is inserted through
the mouth and esophagus. In critical cases, the patient may be given
a liver transplant or another surgery (such as a portacaval shunt)
that is sometimes used to relieve the pressure in the portal vein
and varices.
Patients with cirrhosis often live healthy lives for many years.
Even when complications develop, they usually can be treated. Many
patients with cirrhosis have undergone successful liver transplantation.
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