What is cirrhosis?
Cirrhosis is a complication of many liver diseases that is characterized by abnormal structure and function of the liver. The diseases that lead to cirrhosis do so because they injure and demolish liver cells, and the inflammation and repair that is associated with the dying liver cells causes scar tissue to execute. The liver cells that do not die multiply in an attempt to replace the cells that have died. This results in clusters of newly-formed liver cells (regenerative nodules) within the scar tissue. There are many causes of cirrhosis; they include chemicals (such as alcohol, fat, and certain medications), viruses, toxic metals (such as iron and copper that accumulate in the liver as a result of genetic diseases), and autoimmune liver disease in which the body’s immune system attacks the liver.
Why does cirrhosis cause problems?
The liver is an well-known organ in the body. It performs many critical functions, two of which are producing substances required by the body, for example, clotting proteins that are necessary in order for blood to clot, and removing toxic substances that can be harmful to the body, for example, drugs. The liver also has an important role in regulating the supply to the body of glucose (sugar) and lipids (fat) that the body uses as fuel. In order to perform these critical functions, the liver cells must be working normally, and they must have an intimate relationship with the blood since the substances that are added or removed by the liver are transported to and from the liver by the blood.
The relationship of the liver to the blood is unique. Unlike most organs in the body, only a small amount of blood is supplied to the liver by arteries. Most of the liver’s supply of blood comes from the intestinal veins as the blood returns to the heart. The main vein that returns blood from the intestines is called the portal vein. As the portal vein passes through the liver, it breaks up into increasingly smaller and smaller veins. The tiniest veins (called sinusoids because of their unique structure) are in close contact with the liver cells. In fact, the liver cells line up along the length of the sinusoids. This close relationship between the liver cells and blood from the portal vein allows the liver cells to remove and add substances to the blood. Once the blood has passed through the sinusoids, it is tranquil in increasingly larger and larger veins that ultimately form a single vein, the hepatic vein that returns the blood to the heart.
In cirrhosis, the relationship between blood and liver cells is destroyed. Even though the liver cells that survive or are newly-formed may be able to earn and remove substances from the blood, they do not have the normal, intimate relationship with the blood, and this interferes with the liver cells’ ability to add or remove substances from the blood. In addition, the scarring within the cirrhotic liver obstructs the flow of blood through the liver and to the liver cells. As a result of the obstruction to the flow of blood through the liver, blood “backs-up” in the portal vein, and the pressure in the portal vein increases, a condition called portal hypertension. Because of the obstruction to creep and high pressures in the portal vein, blood in the portal vein seeks other veins in which to return to the heart, veins with lower pressures that bypass the liver. Unfortunately, the liver is unable to add or remove substances from blood that bypasses it. It is a combination of reduced numbers of liver cells, loss of the normal contact between blood passing through the liver and the liver cells, and blood bypassing the liver that leads to many of the manifestations of cirrhosis.
A second reason for the problems caused by cirrhosis is the disturbed relationship between the liver cells and the channels through which bile flows. Bile is a fluid produced by liver cells that has two important functions: to aid in digestion and to remove and eliminate toxic substances from the body. The bile that is produced by liver cells is secreted into very puny channels that run between the liver cells that line the sinusoids, called canaliculi. The canaliculi empty into small ducts which then join together to form larger and larger ducts. Ultimately, all of the ducts combine into one duct that enters the tiny intestine. In this way, bile gets to the intestine where it can back with the digestion of food. At the same time, toxic substances contained in the bile enter the intestine and then are eliminated in the stool. In cirrhosis, the canaliculi are abnormal and the relationship between liver cells and canaliculi is destroyed, just like the relationship between the liver cells and blood in the sinusoids. As a result, the liver is not able to eliminate toxic substances normally, and they can accumulate in the body. To a minor extent, digestion in the intestine also is reduced.
What are the symptoms and signs of cirrhosis?
Patients with cirrhosis may have few or no symptoms and signs of liver disease. Some of the symptoms may be nonspecific, that is, they don’t suggest that the liver is their cause. Some of the more approved symptoms and signs of cirrhosis include:
- Yellowing of the skin (jaundice) due to the accumulation of bilirubin in the blood
- Fatigue
- Weakness
- Loss of appetite
- Itching
- Easy bruising from decreased production of blood clotting factors by the diseased liver.
Patients with cirrhosis also develop symptoms and signs from the complications of cirrhosis that are discussed next.
What are the complications of cirrhosis?
Edema and ascites
As cirrhosis of the liver becomes severe, signals are sent to the kidneys to retain salt and water in the body. The excess salt and water first accumulates in the tissue beneath the skin of the ankles and legs because of the accomplish of gravity when standing or sitting. This accumulation of fluid is called edema or pitting edema. (Pitting edema refers to the fact that pressing a fingertip firmly against an ankle or leg with edema causes an indentation in the skin that persists for some time after release of the pressure. Actually, any type of pressure, such as from the elastic band of a sock, may be enough to cause pitting.) The swelling often is worse at the end of a day after standing or sitting and may lessen overnight as a result of the loss of the effects of gravity when lying down. As cirrhosis worsens and more salt and water are retained, fluid also may accumulate in the abdominal cavity between the abdominal wall and the abdominal organs. This accumulation of fluid (called ascites ) causes swelling of the abdomen, abdominal discomfort, and increased weight.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP)
Fluid in the abdominal cavity (ascites) is the perfect place for bacteria to grow. Normally, the abdominal cavity contains a very puny amount of fluid that is able to resist infection well, and bacteria that enter the abdomen (usually from the intestine) are killed or find their way into the portal vein and to the liver where they are killed. In cirrhosis, the fluid that collects in the abdomen is unable to resist infection normally. In addition, more bacteria find their way from the intestine into the ascites. Therefore, infection within the abdomen and the ascites, referred to as spontaneous bacterial peritonitis or SBP, is likely to occur. SBP is a life- threatening complication. Some patients with SBP have no symptoms, while others have fever, chills, abdominal pain and tenderness, diarrhea, and worsening ascites.
Bleeding from esophageal varices
In the cirrhotic liver, the scar tissue blocks the flow of blood returning to the heart from the intestines and raises the pressure in the portal vein (portal hypertension). When pressure in the portal vein becomes high enough, it causes blood to flow around the liver through veins with lower pressure to reach the heart. The most common veins through which blood bypasses the liver are the veins lining the lower part of the esophagus and the upper fraction of the stomach.
As a result of the increased journey of blood and the resulting increase in pressure, the veins in the lower esophagus and upper stomach expand and then are referred to as esophageal and gastric varices; the higher the portal pressure, the larger the varices and the more likely a patient is to bleed from the varices into the esophagus or stomach.
Bleeding from varices usually is severe and, without immediate treatment, can be fatal. Symptoms of bleeding from varices include vomiting blood (the vomitus can be red blood mixed with clots or “coffee grounds” in appearance, the latter due to the effect of acid on the blood), passing stool that is black and tarry due to changes in the blood as it passes through the intestine (melena), and orthostatic dizziness or fainting (caused by a drop in blood pressure especially when standing up from a lying position).
Bleeding also may occur from varices that create elsewhere in the intestines, for example, the colon, but this is rare. For reasons yet unknown, patients hospitalized because of actively bleeding esophageal varices have a high risk of developing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Hepatic encephalopathy
Some of the protein in food that escapes digestion and absorption is used by bacteria that are normally explain in the intestine. While using the protein for their own purposes, the bacteria make substances that they release into the intestine. These substances then can be absorbed into the body. Some of these substances, for example, ammonia, can have toxic effects on the brain. Ordinarily, these toxic substances are carried from the intestine in the portal vein to the liver where they are removed from the blood and detoxified.
As previously discussed, when cirrhosis is present, liver cells cannot function normally either because they are damaged or because they have lost their normal relationship with the blood. In addition, some of the blood in the portal vein bypasses the liver through other veins. The result of these abnormalities is that toxic substances cannot be removed by the liver cells, and, instead, the toxic substances get in the blood.
When the toxic substances fetch sufficiently in the blood, the function of the brain is impaired, a condition called hepatic encephalopathy. Sleeping during the day rather than at night (reversal of the normal sleep pattern) is among the earliest symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy. Other symptoms include irritability, inability to concentrate or perform calculations, loss of memory, confusion, or unhappy levels of consciousness. Ultimately, severe hepatic encephalopathy causes coma and death.
The toxic substances also get the brains of patients with cirrhosis very sensitive to drugs that are normally filtered and detoxified by the liver. Doses of many drugs that normally are detoxified by the liver have to be reduced to avoid a toxic buildup in cirrhosis, particularly sedatives and drugs that are archaic to promote sleep. Alternatively, drugs may be used that do not need to be detoxified or eliminated from the body by the liver, for example, drugs that are eliminated by the kidneys.
Hepatorenal syndrome
Patients with worsening cirrhosis can develop the hepatorenal syndrome. This syndrome is a serious complication in which the function of the kidneys is reduced. It is a functional problem in the kidneys, that is, there is no physical damage to the kidneys. Instead, the reduced function is due to changes in the arrangement the blood flows through the kidneys themselves. The hepatorenal syndrome is defined as progressive failure of the kidneys to clear substances from the blood and produce adequate amounts of urine even though some other distinguished functions of the kidney, such as retention of salt, are maintained. If liver function improves or a healthy liver is transplanted into a patient with hepatorenal syndrome, the kidneys usually begin to work normally. This suggests that the reduced function of the kidneys is the result of the accumulation of toxic substances in the blood when the liver fails. There are two types of hepatorenal syndrome. One type occurs gradually over months. The other occurs rapidly over a week or two.
Hepatopulmonary syndrome
Rarely, some patients with advanced cirrhosis can develop the hepatopulmonary syndrome. These patients can experience grief breathing because certain hormones released in advanced cirrhosis cause the lungs to function abnormally. The basic problem in the lung is that not enough blood flows through the microscopic blood vessels in the lungs that are in contact with the alveoli (air sacs) of the lungs. Blood flowing through the lungs is shunted around the alveoli and cannot pick up enough oxygen from the air in the alveoli. As a result the patient experiences shortness of breath, particularly with exertion.
Hypersplenism
The spleen normally acts as a filter to remove older red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets (puny particles that are important for the clotting of blood.). The blood that drains from the spleen joins the blood in the portal vein from the intestines. As the pressure in the portal vein rises in cirrhosis, it increasingly blocks the flow of blood from the spleen. The blood “backs-up” and accumulates in the spleen, and the spleen swells in size, a condition referred to as splenomegaly. Sometimes, the spleen is so swollen that it causes abdominal pain.
As the spleen enlarges, it filters out more and more of the blood cells and platelets until their numbers in the blood are reduced. Hypersplenism is the term used to describe this condition, and it is associated with a low red blood cell count (anemia), low white blood cell count (leucopenia), and/or a outrageous platelet count (thrombocytopenia). The anemia can cause weakness, the leucopenia can lead to infections, and the thrombocytopenia can impair the clotting of blood and result in prolonged bleeding.
Liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma)
Cirrhosis due to any cause increases the risk of primary liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma). Primary refers to the fact that the tumor originates in the liver. A secondary liver cancer is one that originates elsewhere in the body and spreads (metastasizes) to the liver.
The most common symptoms and signs of primary liver cancer are abdominal harm and swelling, an enlarged liver, weight loss, and fever. In addition, liver cancers can produce and release a number of substances, including ones that cause an increased in red blood cell count (erythrocytosis), low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), and high blood calcium (hypercalcemia ).
What are the common causes of cirrhosis?
- Alcohol is a very favorite cause of cirrhosis, particularly in the Western world. The development of cirrhosis depends upon the amount and regularity of alcohol intake. Chronic, high levels of alcohol consumption injure liver cells. Thirty percent of individuals who drink daily at least eight to sixteen ounces of hard liquor or the equivalent for fifteen or more years will develop cirrhosis. Alcohol causes a range of liver diseases; from simple and uncomplicated fatty liver (steatosis), to the more serious fatty liver with inflammation (steatohepatitis or alcoholic hepatitis), to cirrhosis.
- Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) refers to a wide spectrum of liver diseases that, like alcoholic liver disease, ranges from simple steatosis, to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), to cirrhosis. All stages of NAFLD have in common the accumulation of fleshy in liver cells. The term nonalcoholic is broken-down because NAFLD occurs in individuals who do not consume excessive amounts of alcohol, yet, in many respects, the minute picture of NAFLD is similar to what can be seen in liver disease that is due to excessive alcohol. NAFLD is associated with a condition called insulin resistance, which, in turn, is associated with the metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus type 2. Obesity is the most important cause of insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, and type 2 diabetes. NAFLD is the most common liver disease in the United States and is responsible for 24% of all liver disease. In fact, the number of livers that are transplanted for NAFLD-related cirrhosis is on the rise. Public health officials are worried that the current epidemic of obesity will dramatically increase the development of NAFLD and cirrhosis in the population.
- Cryptogenic cirrhosis (cirrhosis due to unidentified causes) is a common reason for liver transplantation. It is termed cryptogenic cirrhosis because for many years doctors have been unable to explain why a proportion of patients developed cirrhosis. Doctors now own that cryptogenic cirrhosis is due to NASH (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) caused by long standing obesity, type 2 diabetes, and insulin resistance. The pudgy in the liver of patients with NASH is believed to disappear with the onset of cirrhosis, and this has made it difficult for doctors to make the connection between NASH and cryptogenic cirrhosis for a long time. One distinguished clue that NASH leads to cryptogenic cirrhosis is the finding of a high occurrence of NASH in the new livers of patients undergoing liver transplant for cryptogenic cirrhosis. Finally, a gape from France suggests that patients with NASH have a similar risk of developing cirrhosis as patients with long standing infection with hepatitis C virus. (See discussion that follows.) However, the progression to cirrhosis from NASH is plan to be unimaginative and the diagnosis of cirrhosis typically is made in patients in their sixties.
- Chronic viral hepatitis is a condition where hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus infects the liver for years. Most patients with viral hepatitis will not develop chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis. For example, the majority of patients infected with hepatitis A recover completely within weeks, without developing chronic infection. In contrast, some patients infected with hepatitis B virus and most patients infected with hepatitis C virus effect chronic hepatitis, which, in turn, causes progressive liver damage and leads to cirrhosis, and, sometimes, liver cancers.
- Inherited (genetic) disorders result in the accumulation of toxic substances in the liver which lead to tissue damage and cirrhosis. Examples include the abnormal accumulation of iron (hemochromatosis) or copper (Wilson’s disease). In hemochromatosis, patients inherit a tendency to absorb an excessive amount of iron from food. Over time, iron accumulation in different organs throughout the body causes cirrhosis, arthritis, heart muscle damage leading to heart failure, and testicular dysfunction causing loss of sexual drive. Treatment is aimed at preventing damage to organs by removing iron from the body through bloodletting (removing blood). In Wilson disease, there is an inherited abnormality in one of the proteins that controls copper in the body. Over time, copper accumulates in the liver, eyes, and brain. Cirrhosis, tremor, psychiatric disturbances and other neurological difficulties occur if the condition is not treated early. Treatment is with oral medication that increases the amount of copper that is eliminated from the body in the urine.
- Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a liver disease caused by an abnormality of the immune system that is found predominantly in women. The abnormal immunity in PBC causes chronic inflammation and destruction of the small bile ducts within the liver. The bile ducts are passages within the liver through which bile travels to the intestine. Bile is a fluid produced by the liver that contains substances required for digestion and absorption of fleshy in the intestine, as well as other compounds that are slay products, such as the pigment bilirubin. (Bilirubin is produced by the breakdown of hemoglobin from old red blood cells.). Along with the gallbladder, the bile ducts make up the biliary tract. In PBC, the destruction of the small bile ducts blocks the normal flow of bile into the intestine. As the inflammation continues to destroy more of the bile ducts, it also spreads to slay nearby liver cells. As the destruction of the hepatocytes proceeds, scar tissue (fibrosis) forms and spreads throughout the areas of destruction. The combined effects of progressive inflammation, scarring, and the toxic effects of accumulating extinguish products culminates in cirrhosis.
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is an uncommon disease found frequently in patients with ulcerative colitis . In PSC, the large bile ducts outside of the liver become wrathful, narrowed, and obstructed. Obstruction to the flow of bile leads to infections of the bile ducts and jaundice and eventually causes cirrhosis. In some patients, injury to the bile ducts (usually as a result of surgery) also can cause obstruction and cirrhosis of the liver.
- Autoimmune hepatitis is a liver disease caused by an abnormality of the immune system that is found more commonly in women. The abnormal immune activity in autoimmune hepatitis causes progressive inflammation and destruction of liver cells (hepatocytes), leading ultimately to cirrhosis.
- Infants can be born without bile ducts (biliary atresia) and ultimately develop cirrhosis. Other infants are born lacking vital enzymes for controlling sugars that leads to the accumulation of sugars and cirrhosis. On rare occasions, the absence of a specific enzyme can cause cirrhosis and scarring of the lung (alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency).
- Less common causes of cirrhosis include unusual reactions to some drugs and prolonged exposure to toxins, as well as chronic heart failure (cardiac cirrhosis). In certain parts of the world (particularly Northern Africa), infection of the liver with a parasite (schistosomiasis) is the most approved cause of liver disease and cirrhosis.
How is cirrhosis diagnosed and evaluated?
The single best test for diagnosing cirrhosis is biopsy of the liver. Liver biopsies, however, carry a small risk for serious complications, and, therefore, biopsy often is reserved for those patients in whom the diagnosis of the type of liver disease or the presence of cirrhosis is not clear. The possibility of cirrhosis may be suggested by the history, physical examination, or routine testing. If cirrhosis is present, other tests can be used to determine the severity of the cirrhosis and the presence of complications. Tests also may be broken-down to diagnose the underlying disease that is causing the cirrhosis. The following are some examples of how doctors discover, diagnose and evaluate cirrhosis:
- In taking a patient’s history, the physician may uncover a history of excessive and prolonged intake of alcohol, a history of intravenous drug abuse, or a history of hepatitis. These pieces of information suggest the possibility of liver disease and cirrhosis.
- Patients who are known to have chronic viral hepatitis B or C have a higher probability of having cirrhosis.
- Some patients with cirrhosis have enlarged livers and/or spleens. A doctor can often feel (palpate) the lower edge of an enlarged liver below the right rib cage and feel the tip of the enlarged spleen below the left rib cage. A cirrhotic liver also feels firmer and more irregular than a normal liver.
- Some patients with cirrhosis, particularly alcoholic cirrhosis, have microscopic red spider-like markings (telangiectasias) on the skin, particularly on the chest, that are made up of enlarged, radiating blood vessels. These spider telangiectasias also can be seen in individuals without liver disease, however.
- Jaundice (yellowness of the skin and of the whites of the eyes due to elevated bilirubin in the blood) is common among patients with cirrhosis, but jaundice can occur in patients with liver diseases without cirrhosis and other conditions such as hemolysis (excessive smash down of red blood cells).
- Swelling of the abdomen (ascites) and/or the lower extremities (edema) due to retention of fluid is common among patients with cirrhosis though other diseases can cause them commonly, e.g., congestive heart failure.
- Patients with abnormal copper deposits in their eyes or positive types of neurologic disease may have Wilson’s disease, a genetic disease in which there is abnormal handling and accumulation of copper throughout the body, including the liver, that can lead to cirrhosis.
- Esophageal varices may be found unexpectedly during upper endoscopy (EGD), and they strongly suggesting cirrhosis.
- Computerized tomography (CT or CAT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans and ultrasound examinations of the abdomen done for reasons other than evaluating the possibility of liver disease may unexpectedly detect enlarged livers, abnormally nodular livers, enlarged spleens, and fluid in the abdomen that suggest cirrhosis.
- Advanced cirrhosis leads to a reduced level of albumin in the blood and reduced blood clotting factors due to the loss of the liver’s ability to produce these proteins. Thus, reduced levels of albumin in the blood or abnormal bleeding suggest cirrhosis.
- Abnormal elevation of liver enzymes in the blood (such as ALT and AST) that are obtained routinely as part of yearly health examinations suggests inflammation or injury to the liver from many causes as well as cirrhosis.
- Patients with elevated levels of iron in their blood may have hemochromatosis, a genetic disease of the liver in which iron is handled abnormally and which leads to cirrhosis.
- Auto-antibodies (antinuclear antibody, anti-smooth muscle antibody and anti-mitochondrial antibody) sometimes are detected in the blood and may be a clue to the presence of autoimmune hepatitis or primary biliary cirrhosis, both of which can lead to cirrhosis.
- Liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma) may be detected by CT and MRI scans or ultrasound of the abdomen. Liver cancer most commonly develops in individuals with underlying cirrhosis.
- If there is an accumulation of fluid in the abdomen, a sample of the fluid can be removed using a long needle. The fluid then can be examined and tested. The results of testing may suggest the presence of cirrhosis as the cause of the fluid.
How is cirrhosis treated?
Treatment of cirrhosis includes 1) preventing further injure to the liver, 2) treating the complications of cirrhosis, 3) preventing liver cancer or detecting it early, and 4) liver transplantation.
Preventing further damage to the liver
- Consume a balanced diet and one multivitamin daily. Patients with PBC with impaired absorption of fat soluble vitamins may need additional vitamins D and K.
- Avoid drugs (including alcohol) that cause liver damage. All patients with cirrhosis should avoid alcohol. Most patients with alcohol induced cirrhosis experience an improvement in liver function with abstinence from alcohol. Even patients with chronic hepatitis B and C can substantially reduce liver pain and monotonous the progression towards cirrhosis with abstinence from alcohol.
- Avoid nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs, e.g., ibuprofen). Patients with cirrhosis can experience worsening of liver and kidney function with NSAIDs.
- Eradicate hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus by using anti-viral medications. Not all patients with cirrhosis due to chronic viral hepatitis are candidates for drug treatment. Some patients may experience serious deterioration in liver function and/or intolerable side effects during treatment. Thus, decisions to treat viral hepatitis have to be individualized, after consulting with doctors experienced in treating liver diseases (hepatologists).
- Remove blood from patients with hemochromatosis to reduce the levels of iron and prevent further damage to the liver. In Wilson’s disease, medications can be ancient to increase the excretion of copper in the urine to reduce the levels of copper in the body and prevent further distress to the liver.
- Suppress the immune system with drugs such as prednisone and azathioprine (Imuran) to decrease inflammation of the liver in autoimmune hepatitis.
- Treat patients with PBC with a bile acid preparation, ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), also called ursodiol (Actigall). Results of an analysis that combined the results from several clinical trials showed that UDCA increased survival among PBC patients during 4 years of therapy. The development of portal hypertension also was reduced by the UDCA. It is important to ticket that despite producing positive benefits, UDCA treatment primarily retards progression and does not cure PBC. Other medications such as colchicine and methotrexate also may have benefit in subsets of patients with PBC.
- Immunize patients with cirrhosis against infection with hepatitis A and B to prevent a serious deterioration in liver function. There are currently no vaccines available for immunizing against hepatitis C.
Treating the complications of cirrhosis
Edema and ascites. Retention of salt and water can lead to swelling of the ankles and legs (edema) or abdomen (ascites) in patients with cirrhosis. Doctors often advise patients with cirrhosis to restrict dietary salt (sodium) and fluid to decrease edema and ascites. The amount of salt in the diet usually is restricted to 2 grams per day and fluid to 1.2 liters per day. In most patients with cirrhosis, however, salt and fluid restriction is not enough, and diuretics have to be added.
Diuretics are medications that work in the kidneys to promote the elimination of salt and water into the urine. A combination of the diuretics spironolactone (Aldactone) and furosemide can reduce or eliminate the edema and ascites in most patients. During treatment with diuretics, it is important to monitor the function of the kidneys by measuring blood levels of blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine to determine if too much diuretic is being used. Too much diuretic can lead to kidney dysfunction that is reflected in elevations of the BUN and creatinine levels in the blood.
Sometimes, when the diuretics do not work (in which case the ascites is said to be refractory), a long needle or catheter is used to draw out the ascitic fluid directly from the abdomen, a method called abdominal paracentesis. It is common to withdraw great amounts (liters) of fluid from the abdomen when the ascites is causing painful abdominal distension and/or worry breathing because it limits the movements of the diaphragms.
Another treatment for refractory ascites is a way called transjugular intravenous portosystemic shunting (TIPS, leer below).
Bleeding from varices. If large varices produce in the esophagus or upper stomach, patients with cirrhosis are at risk for serious bleeding due to rupture of these varices. Once varices have bled, they tend to rebleed and the probability that a patient will die from each bleeding episode is high (30%-35%). Therefore, treatment is necessary to prevent the first (initial) bleeding episode as well as rebleeding. Treatments include medications and procedures to decrease the pressure in the portal vein and procedures to destroy the varices.
- Propranolol (Inderal), a beta blocker, is effective in lowering pressure in the portal vein and is used to prevent initial bleeding and rebleeding from varices in patients with cirrhosis. Another class of oral medications that lowers portal pressure is the nitrates, for example, isosorbide dinitrate ( Isordil). Nitrates often are added to propranolol if propranolol alone does not adequately lower portal pressure or prevent bleeding.
- Octreotide (Sandostatin) also decreases portal vein pressure and has been used to treat variceal bleeding.
- During upper endoscopy (EGD), either sclerotherapy or band ligation can be performed to obliterate varices and stop active bleeding and prevent rebleeding. Sclerotherapy involves infusing dinky doses of sclerosing solutions into the varices. The sclerosing solutions cause inflammation and then scarring of the varices, obliterating them in the process. Band ligation involves applying rubber bands around the varices to obliterate them. (Band ligation of the varices is analogous to rubber banding of hemorrhoids.) Complications of sclerotherapy include esophageal ulcers, bleeding from the esophageal ulcers, esophageal perforation, esophageal stricture (narrowing due to scarring that can cause dysphagia), mediastinitis (inflammation in the chest that can cause chest distress), pericarditis (inflammation around the heart that can cause chest pain), and peritonitis (infection in the abdominal cavity). Studies have shown that band ligation may be slightly more effective with fewer complications than sclerotherapy.
- Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) is a non-surgical procedure to decrease the pressure in the portal vein. TIPS is performed by a radiologist who inserts a stent (tube) through a neck vein, down the inferior vena cava and into the hepatic vein within the liver. The stent then is placed so that one raze is in the high pressure portal vein and the other waste is in the low pressure hepatic vein. This tube shunts blood around the liver and by so doing lowers the pressure in the portal vein and varices and prevents bleeding from the varices. TIPS is particularly useful in patients who fail to retort to beta blockers, variceal sclerotherapy, or banding. (TIPS also is useful in treating patients with ascites that do not respond to salt and fluid restriction and diuretics.) TIPS can be used in patients with cirrhosis to prevent variceal bleeding while the patients are waiting for liver transplantation. The most favorite side effect of TIPS is hepatic encephalopathy. Another major problem with TIPS is the development of narrowing and occlusion of the stent, causing recurrence of portal hypertension and variceal bleeding and ascites. The estimated frequency of stent occlusion ranges from 30%-50% in 12 months. Fortunately, there are methods to open occluded stents. Other complications of TIPS include bleeding due to inadvertent puncture of the liver capsule or a bile duct, infection, heart failure, and liver failure.
- A surgical operation to create a shunt (passage) from the high-pressure portal vein to veins with lower pressure can lower blood flow and pressure in the portal vein and prevent varices from bleeding. One such surgical procedure is called distal splenorenal shunt (DSRS). It is appropriate to consider such a surgical shunt for patients with portal hypertension who have early cirrhosis. (The risks of major shunt surgery in these patients is less than in patients with advanced cirrhosis.) During DSRS, the surgeon detaches the splenic vein from the portal vein, and attaches it to the renal vein. Blood then is shunted from the spleen around the liver, lowering the pressure in the portal vein and varices and preventing bleeding from the varices.
Hepatic encephalopathy. Patients with an abnormal sleep cycle, impaired thinking, odd behavior, or other signs of hepatic encephalopathy usually should be treated with a low protein diet and oral lactulose. Dietary protein is restricted because it is a source of the toxic compounds that cause hepatic encephalopathy. Lactulose, which is a liquid, traps the toxic compounds in the colon. Consequently, they cannot be absorbed into the blood stream and cause encephalopathy. To be distinct that adequate lactulose is explain in the colon at all times, the patient should adjust the dose to produce 2-3 semiformed bowel movements a day. (Lactulose is a laxative, and the adequacy of treatment can be judged by loosening or increasing frequency of stools.) If symptoms of encephalopathy persist, oral antibiotics such as neomycin or metronidazole (Flagyl), can be added to the treatment regimen. Antibiotics work by blocking the production of the toxic compounds by the bacteria in the colon.
Hypersplenism. The filtration of blood by an enlarged spleen usually results in only mild reductions of red blood cells (anemia), white blood cells (leukopenia) and platelets (thrombocytopenia) that do not require treatment. Severe anemia, however, may require blood transfusions or treatment with erythropoietin or epoetin alfa (Epogen, Procrit), hormones that stimulate the production of red blood cells. If the numbers of white blood cells are severely reduced, another hormone called granulocyte-colony stimulating factor is available to increase the numbers of white blood cells. An example of one such factor is filgrastim (Neupogen).
No favorite medication is available yet to increase the number of platelets. As a necessary precaution, patients with low platelets should not use aspirin or other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) since these drugs can hinder the function of platelets. If a low number of platelets is associated with significant bleeding, transfusions of platelets usually should be given. Surgical removal of the spleen (called splenectomy) should be avoided, if possible, because of the risk of excessive bleeding during the operation and the risk of anesthesia in advanced liver disease.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP). Patients suspected of having spontaneous bacterial peritonitis usually will undergo paracentesis. Fluid that is removed is examined for white blood cells and cultured for bacteria. Culturing involves inoculating a sample of the ascites into a bottle of nutrient-rich fluid that encourages the growth of bacteria, thus facilitating the identification of even small numbers of bacteria. Blood and urine samples often are obtained as well for culturing because many patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis also will have infection in their blood and urine. In fact, many doctors absorb that infection may have begun in the blood and the urine and spread to the ascitic fluid to cause spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Most patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis are hospitalized and treated with intravenous antibiotics such as ampicillin, gentamycin, and one of the newer generation cephalosporin. Patients usually treated with antibiotics include:
- Patients with blood, urine, and/or ascites fluid cultures that contain bacteria.
- Patients without bacteria in their blood, urine, and ascitic fluid but who have elevated numbers of white blood cells (neutrophils) in the asciticfluid(>250 neutrophils/cc). Elevated neutrophil numbers in ascitic fluid often means that there is bacterial infection. Doctors believe that the lack of bacteria with culturing in some patients with increased neutrophils is due either to a very small number of bacteria or ineffective culturing techniques.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a serious infection. It often occurs in patients with advanced cirrhosis whose immune systems are weak, but with recent antibiotics and early detection and treatment, the prognosis of recovering from an episode of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is good.
In some patients oral antibiotics (such as Cipro or Septra) can be prescribed to prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Not all patients with cirrhosis and ascites should be treated with antibiotics to prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, but some patients are at high risk for developing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and warrant preventive treatment:
- Patients with cirrhosis who are hospitalized for bleeding varices have a high risk of developing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and should be started on antibiotics early during the hospitalization to prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Patients with recurring episodes of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Patients with low protein levels in the ascitic fluid (Ascitic fluid with low levels of protein is more likely to become infected.)
Prevention and early detection of liver cancer
Several types of liver disease that cause cirrhosis are associated with a particularly high incidence of liver cancer, for example, hepatitis B and C, and it would be useful to screen for liver cancer since early surgical treatment or transplantation of the liver can cure the patient of cancer. The difficulty is that the methods available for screening are only partially effective, identifying at best only 50% of patients at a curable stage of their cancer. Despite the partial effectiveness of screening, most patients with cirrhosis, particularly hepatitis B and C, are screened yearly or every six months with ultrasound examination of the liver and measurements of cancer-produced proteins in the blood, e.g. alpha fetoprotein.
Liver transplantation
Cirrhosis is irreversible. Many patients’ liver function will gradually worsen despite treatment and complications of cirrhosis will increase and become difficult to treat. Therefore, when cirrhosis is far advanced, liver transplantation often is the only option for treatment. Recent advances in surgical transplantation and medications to prevent infection and rejection of the transplanted liver have greatly improved survival after transplantation. On average, more than 80% of patients who receive transplants are alive after five years. Not everyone with cirrhosis is a candidate for transplantation. Furthermore, there is a shortage of livers to transplant, and there usually is a long (months to years) wait before a liver for transplanting becomes available. Therefore, measures to retard the progression of liver disease and treat and prevent complications of cirrhosis are vitally principal.
What is new and in the future for cirrhosis?
Progress in the management and prevention of cirrhosis continues. Research is ongoing to determine the mechanism of scar formation in the liver and how this process of scarring can be interrupted or even reversed. Newer and better treatments for viral liver disease are being developed to prevent the progression to cirrhosis. Prevention of viral hepatitis by vaccination, which is available for hepatitis B, is being developed for hepatitis C. Treatments for the complications of cirrhosis are being developed or revised and tested continually. Finally, research is being directed at identifying new proteins in the blood that can detect liver cancer early or predict which patients will develop liver cancer.Cirrhosis At A Glance
- Cirrhosis is a complication of liver disease which involves loss of liver cells and irreversible scarring of the liver.
- Alcohol and viral hepatitis B and C are common causes of cirrhosis, although there are many other causes.
- Cirrhosis can cause weakness, loss of appetite, easy bruising, yellowing of the skin (jaundice), itching, and fatigue.
- Diagnosis of cirrhosis can be suggested by the history, physical examination and blood tests, and can be confirmed by liver biopsy.
- Complications of cirrhosis include edema and ascites, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, bleeding from varices, hepatic encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome, hepatopulmonary syndrome, hypersplenism, and liver cancer.
- Treatment of cirrhosis is designed to prevent further damage to the liver, treat complications of cirrhosis, and preventing or detecting liver cancer early.
- Transplantation of the liver is becoming an important option for treating patients with advanced cirrhosis.
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Filed under Stomach Band by on May 22nd, 2011.
We all know and care for Mungo Jerry’s In The Summertime, Blue Swede’s Hooked On A Feeling, Gary Numan’s Cars, Norman Greenbaum’s Spirit In The Sky and a myriad of other wonderful One Hit Wonders but how often do we consider about movies by One Hit Directors? It’s an intriguing subject that I keep coming back to so I started putting together a list. Many of the films included here were not necessarily ‘Hits’, but were, in my humble opinion at least, noteworthy and should have been indicative of a long and successful career for the film director involved. That these directors did not become the stellar lights of Hollywood in the tradition of John Ford and Cecil B. DeMille makes for the subject matter of this story. Here’s the list.
1. Mystery Men 1999 This delightful send up of super hero films failed to recoup its rather large budget and thus its director Kinka Usher, of the Taco Bell Chihuahua commercials was sent back to the minor leagues. Unbelievable. At no point does this film go wrong, visually, in the storytelling, editing, it is a work of perfection. Unfortunately most of the teenage comical book nerd types who make such standard fare as the X-Men successful stayed away in droves as they likely saw themselves too clearly in the frustrated and often pathetic, if highly enjoyable and hilarious cast of peculiar characters that inhabited this film. Amongst the stars were Ben Stiller as Mr. Furious, William Macy as the Shoveler, Janeane Garofalo as the Bowler, Paul “Peewee Herman” Reubens as Spleen, Wes Studi as the native American hero Sphinx and Hank Azaria as The Blue Raja, master of the deadly spoons as well as Greg Kinnear and Geoffrey Speed as the hilariously villainous Casanova Frankenstein providing wonderful performances. I can’t help but believe that this movie will take on cult film status as the years go by.
2. Pot O’ Gold 1940 Produced by Jimmy Roosevelt (FDR’s son who apparently had nothing better to do) and Directed by George Marshall, (no not the World War II General), Starring Jimmy Stewart who once pointed out this film as the worst he ever made, we stumbled across this rare gem by chance a few years ago. Undoubtedly when released it was views as a weird anomaly that did not fit in with the norms of the day. But when viewed today all one needs do is study with an eye groomed on Mel Brooks’ films and you’ll be in a wonderful treat as Stewart and company romp through such ludicrous songs as A Knife, A Fork And A Spoon and Paulette Goddard does the unforgettable gender bender pleased caballero dance. The only thing missing is Gene Wilder. And, it’s now in the public domain so download a copy of this movie soon. It’s great!
3. Who’s Minding The Mint 1967 Director: Howard Morris who most of may remember as the loony Ernest T. Bass of Andy Griffith fame. Morris was also an original cast member and writer on the 50s Sid Caesar Show along with Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Woody Allen and Neil Simon. He turned his hand to directing episodic television in the 60s including Andy Griffith before delivering this astonishing farce which starred a host of Hollywood funnymen including Milton Berle, Victor Buono, Bob Denver, Jamie Farr, Jack Gilford and many more. In my opinion this movie ranks with It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World as it’s similar in casting and performance. It was perhaps the last gasp of classic Hollywood farcical comedy making. Unfortunately Morris’ career as a director never took off despite this advantageous film. Thus far it has not been released on DVD.
4. Comic Book Villains 2002 Directed by James Robinson is the anecdote of two warring comic book shop owners who vie with each other for a rare collection resulting in murder and mayhem. Much like Mystery Men though on a much lower budget, an Indy Film to be exact, this great send up of comic book shop owners is a hoot throughout, though I have to admit that unless you have some knowledge of the amusing shop crowd you may not get all the subtle in jokes. The cast includes DJ Qualls, Donal Logue and Cary Elwes of Robin Hood Men In Tights fame.
5. What Dreams May Come 1998 Directed by Vincent Ward. Much like Mystery Men this big budget spectacle starring Robin Williams failed to do great more than break even thus rendering it a failure in the movie industry’s eyes. It’s content, based loosely on a Richard Matheson (the famed sci-fi writer) novel, is a journey through the afterlife as Williams attempts to save his wife who has committed suicide after their children have died in a car demolish. Grim stuff which is surprisingly upbeat as the film attempts to paint a lush spirit world involving reincarnation and Karmic atonement. That it didn’t appeal to everyone is a given considering its subject matter, but visually this one is spectacular beyond words and Director Vincent Ward delivers the superb on every level. He has returned to making small budget foreign films, the genre he had come from before this movie. It is astonishing to me that Hollywood will not give a second chance to directors such as him or Mystery Men’s Kinka Usher. Dollars are indeed all that matters in tinseltown. Talent is not nurtured.
One intriguing aspect of this film as I’ve come to view it – the obvious interpretation of this story is that Williams’ character is the hero who in mythological fashion goes into Hell to rescue his wife played by Annabelle Sciorra who has condemned herself by committing the sin of suicide with the male and female characters assuming the standard hero and heroine roles. But, another interpretation would be that it is Williams and not Sciorra who is in need of rescuing and through his act of bravery saves not his wife who truly never in danger, but himself. That the basic storyline of this film can be stood on its head and looked at in this fashion gives it a depth rarely found in motion pictures. Perhaps this will in time become a cult classic as well.
6. The Deer Hunter 1978 Director: Michael Cimino also made the successful Thunderbolt and Lightfoot with Clint Eastwood, but that film was really an Eastwood project and predated The Deer Hunter. His subsequent films were landmark disasters, Heaven’s Gate and Year Of The Dragon to name only a couple. Cimino was attempting to be an artist on film, to paint dazzling canvases. The anxiety was sometimes successful, but more often failed. A recent re-viewing of The Deer Hunter made me realize that even his most critically acclaimed film was flawed, the critics of 1978 being overcome more by the style than the substance which was thin at best. The memorable wedding reception sequence in particular now seems ponderous and self-indulgent. Among the directors listed here, Cimino perhaps most rightfully belongs as a One Hit Wonder.
7. Citizen Kane 1940 Director: Orson Welles. Truly, the Great Orson was a One Hit Wonder despite The Stranger which was standard at best, andThe Stunning Ambersons which seems pointless and the over wrought and over estimated Touch Of Despicable. And though I truly love Citizen Kane, no film aficionado could say otherwise, dare I say it – Citizen Kane is beginning to creak. If viewed once too often it begins to resemble a collection of visual devices and gimmicks than a correct movie. Perhaps that why Orson was never able to match it. He was in many ways the original Cimino, the master of style over substance. That’s not to say that Citizen Kane isn’t brilliant, it is. But more a novelty item than a true movie in the sense that John Ford or George Stevens made movies.
8. Will Penny 1968 Directed by Tom Gries. This stripped down Western qualifies as a “New Western” coming at the end of the 60s but doesn’t fall prey to the traps that awaited self indulgent ultra violent fare like The Wild Bunch. Just a superb solid little film from beginning to ending with a supporting cast that includes the excellent Joan Hackett, Bruce Dern, Anthony Zerbe, Ben Johnson, Lee Majors, Donald Pleasance and Slim Pickens. Charleton Heston and Joan Hackett stand out and Heston always listed as one of his celebrated films.
9. Islands In The Stream 1976 Director: Nicholas Schaffner Taken from a Ernest Hemingway novel I think this one looks better as the years go by. It is about aging and loss, but done so skillfully you never feel manipulated. It feels real. One of George C. Scott’s best performances and that’s saying a lot. Don’t miss it.
10. One Eyed Jacks 1961 Director: Marlon Brando. This was Brando’s only outing as a director and with it he predated and predicted the trend of Westerns to come with touches that would become standard in Sergio Leone’s Spaghetti Westerns and Sam Peckinpah’s epics of the late 60s and early 70s. The only thing lacking is an ending which seems contrived and unsatisfying after two and a half hours of undiluted realism. His original cut of the film ran a tubby hour longer. When it was trimmed by the studio he washed his hands of it. A restored edition will never happen, the footage is likely lost forever and the status of the film is clouded as it may have moved into the public domain due to Brando’s ownership and his subsequent lack of interest in it. Brando may have had more ability as an actor than a director, but he never put his hand to it again.
11. Yentl 1983 Directed by Barbra Streisand. From the short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer, a wonderful film, one of the few traditional style musicals made in the last four decades that actually works. Streisand’s only turn behind the camera. She unjustly did not receive so much as an Oscar nomination for it.
12. Forbidden Planet 1956 Directed by Fred M. Wilcox. The all time Classic Science Fiction film starring Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis and Leslie Nielson of The Naked Gun films fame and of course Robbie The Robert. This film predates and obviously inspired Star Trek heavily. Its special effects detached hold up and taken from Shakespeare’s The Tempest it alludes to the highbrow element as well. A brilliant on every level. Wilcox directed only a handful of other films. What a shame.
Obscure & Not Necessarily Brilliant But Intriguing
13. Weekend At Dunkirk 1964 Directed by Henri Verneuil. A French film starring Jean Paul Belmondo as a soldier trying to escape the horrible beachhead in France during the fateful evacuation of June 1940 during the German Nazi invasion of France. In the course of the film he meets an assortment of odd characters who ring surprisingly true. I haven’t seen this film in years, but it made a great impression on me as a kid. A truly anti-war film unlike the propaganda being made these days.
14. Mutter Them Willie Boy Is Here 1969 Directed by Abraham Polonsky. If you could removed the Anglo casting from the leads this could be a shimmering share, the true story of a native American pursued by the law in turn of the century (19th into 20th, geez, never thought I’d have to clarify that one) California. Detached, Robert Blake is powerful in the lead and Robert Redford plays his usual laconic Western persona magnificently. The music by Dave Grusin is haunting and perhaps the film’s strongest point.
15. That Man From Rio 1964 Directed by Phillippe De Broca. Again, Belmondo in a silly send up of 60s Spy Films. Lots of fun, at least when you were a kid. I’d savor to see it again. Anyone know where it can be found.
16. Those Daring Young Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies aka Monte Carlo Or Bust 1969 Directed by Ken Annakin. Starring Tony Curtis, Susan Hampshire, Peter Cook, Dudley Moore and many more. I saw this at a Saturday afternoon matinee when I was a kid and still adore it. Great fun. A movie with a sly sense of humor, not purely kid stuff at all. Finally released on DVD last year. Annakin also directed 1965′s Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes, so maybe we should list him as a Two Hit Wonder.
17. The Strawberry Statement 1970 Directed by Stuart Hagmann. The only realistic film ever made about the student protests of the 1960s. I originally saw this back on the tedious show in the early 70s, but it stayed with me as it made clear, to me at least, that the lead character played by Bruce Davison, was more interested in the girl, Kim Darby, than being politically conscious. Based on a book about the Columbia University protests of 1967. Never released on DVD. A major stumbling block in its re-release may be that the film is chock full of 60s Rock music, the owners of which, major corporations and the artists themselves, may be holding up due to licensing fees, the same fate which has befallen the old TV Expose WKRP In Cincinnati. I saw it again on TCM, Turner Classic Movies and it did not hold up as well, truly a bit of fluff in terms of style over substance as we’ve noted before in this article, but an interesting time piece nonetheless.
18. Brother John 1971 Directed by James Goldstone. This is a strange movie starring Sidney Poitier as a man who may or may not be the Messiah come help to a small Southern town. Will Geer has a memorable role as the town doctor. Never released on DVD. Perhaps not brilliant, but worth watching more than once.
19. The Great Bank Robbery 1969 Directed by Hy Averback. From the man who brought us F Troop, like Howard Morris mostly known as a director of television comedies, Averback gave us one of the weirdest, most hilarious Westerns ever made, ranking right up there with Blazing Saddles. Starring Zero Mostel who delivers the bizarre song Rainbow Rider (You Can Bang Your Head Against The Wall), Clint Walker, Kim Novak, Claude Akins, Elisha Cook Jr, Mako, Sam Jaffee and a host of others it was finally released on DVD last year.
20. Whale Music 1994 Directed by Richard J. Lewis. A Canadian film taken from Paul Quarrington’s gleaming novel in which a Brian Wilson-esque character is slowly drawn out of his shell by a free spirited and slowly deranged young woman. Paul Grossman, one of Canada’s most successful actors co-stars as his brother. The soundtrack is provided by the cult band The Rheostats. The song Claire was a minor but very memorable hit from the movie. The late Quarrington was a musician in real life and end friends with Pop Star Dan Hill of Sometimes When We Touch Fame. Watch for him as Pete The Bartender.
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Filed under Stomach Band by on May 7th, 2011.
Whether, like the poet Virgil (Solozzo), you are un’ uomo di biziniss, or whether you’re just some sofa spud writing to a “biziniss,” you should know how to write the excellent kind of letter. In this essay, I will explain how it is done, while all you have to do is one simple thing: watch and learn. All right, that’s two simple things, but here is where you get your very first chance to “multitask” That is peachy.
When you undertake to write a business letter, you must open with the proper greeting or “salivation,” from the Latin greeting, “Salve,” which originated as a request for unguent. If you know the name of the person you are writing to, then, by all means, employ the name, preceded by the word ‘dear’ and followed by a colon, as in:
Dear Stinky:
Blah blah blah blah blah.
If you are writing to a heartless, soulless anonymous conglomerate that knows you not and cares even less, then you must try a different arrive. There was a time when you would be counseled to start your letter with “Dear Sir:” under the assumption that the captain of industry’s lackey you were addressing was a man. We cannot make that assumption nowadays. You might be writing to a woman. For all you know, you might be
writing to a grizzly bear, but, so far, society does not require such a leap of faith. Unruffled, to cover yourself in the possible event of a person from either gender seeing your letter, you are expected to begin it with:
Dear Sir or Madam:
Even as a guy, I find this highly offensive and discriminatory. What you are saying, when you really take a good scrutinize at it is, “Dear fellow who was awarded a knighthood or supervisor in a brothel.” I ask you, is that fair? Is that polite? Is that even businesslike? I certainly do not think so. I’m surprised the women’s libbers haven’t jumped on this one with the hell that hath no fury. All right, enough editorializing. Suffice it to say that you, the caring, sensitive and politically correct business correspondent, should, at the very least, try to tone down the insult to the woman. I would suggest something like:
Dear Sir or Lady of Questionable Virtue:
If you imagine it is too much trouble to use a longer term than “Madam,” then you could, in the name of fairness, balance the scales a little bit the other way. Perhaps something like:
Dear Pimp or Madam:
That will certainly stave off the writer’s cramp, but I am not so sure you will be getting your letter off to the best open.
Now we secure to the text or “torso” of the letter. This is where you say what is on your mind. Well, maybe not exactly what is on your mind, as in:
Dear Sir or Aging Procuress :
I could certain use a frosty beer. Where did I put the remote?
You should confine your observations to the things that are germane to the recipient’s business and your problem therewith. Oh, by the procedure, if you are sending anything along with the letter you should say so right at the outset. For some reason or another, you are supposed to imagine your letter is a big fuzzy warm blanket. Here is what I mean:
Enclosed under cover of this letter, please find a whacked off pinky.
Now you may think you are being more than a little insulting to the reader’s deductive powers by specifically asking him to “please rep” your enclosure, but, take my word for it: people who routinely read business letters eat that sort of thing up.
If you have a problem with a product or service the recipient was supposed to have provided, you should say what the problem is, but find a way to do so without profanity or death threats. Otherwise, yours may no longer qualify as a business letter and, as a consequence, will be deemed ineligible for the Annual Business Letter Sweepstakes.
A truly polished business letter will enact the text part by finding something to thank the reader for, no matter how perturbed you might be at his business. This is to demonstrate your reasonableness and desire to keep him (or the whore) off balance.
Finally, when you have said your say and ventilated your spleen, you end the letter with a “valediction,” which is commonly used in correspondence in lieu of having to “valedite” the guy’s parking. Most of these are meant to declare your verisimilitude or humiliation, such as:
Sincerely,
Yours truly,
I kid you not,
Your humble and obliging servant,
Your unworthy and despicable sycophant.
You score the idea. But you need not feel constrained by the narrow list of choices I have provided you, even if I do know wherefrom I speak. Any valediction that conveys a warm and good feeling will suffice to close out your letter in a sufficiently businesslike fashion.
Here, he said, as a study of patient tolerance played upon his handsome features, let me present you how it is done, from soup to balls:
Dear Sir or Damsel with a Past:
Please find under cover of this letter a map of Belize.
I am most dissatisfied with your suppositories. I find that, for all the good they have done me, I may as well have stuck them in a place that gets very limited sunlight. I wish my money to be cheerfully refunded, just as it says on the cereal box.
Thank you for eventually passing away.
Oodles and oodles of love,
Your Name Here
Counterpoint Essay #1
The Business Letter
Brace yourself, I am going to begin by admitting that my brother is right about something. You should learn how to write a respectable business letter. What he so egregiously omitted is: so should he.
To begin with, ask yourself, what has this anonymous Order of the Bather (Like, Burl Ives? If that fat old hippie ever took a bath in his life, I’ll eat my hat, band and all.) or ex- hooker ever done for you that you should address either of them as “dear? ” El zippo, that’s what! Instead of the namby-pamby arrive my brother would have you use, I think you should set the tone by telling it like it is, right up front. Here’s how you really want to start a business letter:
Hey, you:
What have you done for me lately?
Now that you have the niceties out of the arrangement, you can go on to the serious stuff. I am talking here, as serious as a mutter wreck, and that is plenty, despite the unusual TV pilot: World’s Wackiest Train Wrecks. It was cancelled so quickly, if you blinked, you missed part of an episode. Yet Moby Dick, the Puppet Show keeps playing to packed houses. I just don’t understand.
One of the very few other things I persistently fail to understand is that, while we can remember every stitch of the multiplication table (At least through the terrible twos, right? ), we can never keep track of our umbrellas. The other day, I left my most expensive umbrella in a taxi. I managed cover the deed up by telling my wife I was at an orgy, but I am not altogether sure I allayed her suspicions. It fair goes to point to you, one should never get too attached. To an umbrella, that is.
To be sure, there are a number of things in this short, transitory life to which you should not get attached. Among them are:
1) flypaper
2) downed telephone wires
3) the halls of poison ivy
4) handcuffs
5) hand grenades
6) Siamese twins (Remember, two’s company, three’s a crowd.)
You should carry this list with you at all times and consult it frequently. It can score you out of a crunch or a jam, but not both together, which is just as well. When you come right down to it, how much call is there for crunchy jam these days? Not much, I’d say, and I am considered quite the grommet when it comes to what they call your oat cuisine (which, oddly enough, does not require the use of oats. Go figure!). I suppose I should admit that I have a selfish interest in my otherwise benign attempt to steer you toward the right preserves. I am presently undertaking efforts to market a line of high-class jellies, with flavors that are a bit off the beaten effect. Up to now we have spinach, roadkill and dirt. We are test marketing some new “hip” flavors like “rubber blubber,” “gunpowder chowder,” and “asphalt surprise.” So far the jury is out and very unlikely to return, but that is a horse of another day.
Meanwhile, my brother would have you believe that he is “the answer man” in regard to whatever it is we’re talking about, the clear and unmistakable implication being that I know nothing. Buncombe! In point of fact, I am the answer man. Consider this not inconsiderable list of samples from my vast trove of answers, and, remember, I am just itching the surface:
1) To get to the other side
2) They don’t bury the survivors
3) One to hold the light bulb and three to yank the chair out
4) Both of them (a variant of #3)
5) The egg
I could go on and on, but surely you must know by this time, if there is one thing I do not do, it is to go on and on. I am a guy who likes to come to the point, except for that one time when I sat on a thumbtack. You had better believe I made definite I wouldn’t make that mistake again. As it turns out, I have not, even to the degree of hearing people command that I am “tack-less,” and darned proud of it, may I add.
In fact, as I look over the contents of this foray into erudition, I feel a sense of hubris in a job well done. Now, if you will pardon me, I am going to go slap myself good and hard on the back.
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Filed under Stomach Band by on Sep 6th, 2010.
What is cirrhosis?
Cirrhosis is a complication of many liver diseases that is characterized by abnormal structure and function of the liver. The diseases that lead to cirrhosis do so because they injure and kill liver cells, and the inflammation and repair that is associated with the dying liver cells causes scar tissue to fabricate. The liver cells that do not die multiply in an attempt to replace the cells that have died. This results in clusters of newly-formed liver cells (regenerative nodules) within the scar tissue. There are many causes of cirrhosis; they include chemicals (such as alcohol, fat, and certain medications), viruses, toxic metals (such as iron and copper that accumulate in the liver as a result of genetic diseases), and autoimmune liver disease in which the body’s immune system attacks the liver.
Why does cirrhosis cause problems?
The liver is an famous organ in the body. It performs many critical functions, two of which are producing substances required by the body, for example, clotting proteins that are considerable in order for blood to clot, and removing toxic substances that can be harmful to the body, for example, drugs. The liver also has an important role in regulating the supply to the body of glucose (sugar) and lipids (burly) that the body uses as fuel. In order to effect these critical functions, the liver cells must be working normally, and they must have an intimate relationship with the blood since the substances that are added or removed by the liver are transported to and from the liver by the blood.
The relationship of the liver to the blood is unique. Unlike most organs in the body, only a exiguous amount of blood is supplied to the liver by arteries. Most of the liver’s supply of blood comes from the intestinal veins as the blood returns to the heart. The main vein that returns blood from the intestines is called the portal vein. As the portal vein passes through the liver, it breaks up into increasingly smaller and smaller veins. The tiniest veins (called sinusoids because of their original structure) are in close contact with the liver cells. In fact, the liver cells line up along the length of the sinusoids. This conclude relationship between the liver cells and blood from the portal vein allows the liver cells to remove and add substances to the blood. Once the blood has passed through the sinusoids, it is collected in increasingly larger and larger veins that ultimately accomplish a single vein, the hepatic vein that returns the blood to the heart.
In cirrhosis, the relationship between blood and liver cells is destroyed. Even though the liver cells that survive or are newly-formed may be able to produce and remove substances from the blood, they do not have the normal, intimate relationship with the blood, and this interferes with the liver cells’ ability to add or remove substances from the blood. In addition, the scarring within the cirrhotic liver obstructs the flow of blood through the liver and to the liver cells. As a result of the obstruction to the scoot of blood through the liver, blood “backs-up” in the portal vein, and the pressure in the portal vein increases, a condition called portal hypertension. Because of the obstruction to flow and high pressures in the portal vein, blood in the portal vein seeks other veins in which to return to the heart, veins with lower pressures that bypass the liver. Unfortunately, the liver is unable to add or remove substances from blood that bypasses it. It is a combination of reduced numbers of liver cells, loss of the normal contact between blood passing through the liver and the liver cells, and blood bypassing the liver that leads to many of the manifestations of cirrhosis.
A second reason for the problems caused by cirrhosis is the disturbed relationship between the liver cells and the channels through which bile flows. Bile is a fluid produced by liver cells that has two important functions: to aid in digestion and to remove and eliminate toxic substances from the body. The bile that is produced by liver cells is secreted into very miniature channels that run between the liver cells that line the sinusoids, called canaliculi. The canaliculi empty into small ducts which then join together to form larger and larger ducts. Ultimately, all of the ducts combine into one duct that enters the small intestine. In this way, bile gets to the intestine where it can help with the digestion of food. At the same time, toxic substances contained in the bile enter the intestine and then are eliminated in the stool. In cirrhosis, the canaliculi are abnormal and the relationship between liver cells and canaliculi is destroyed, just like the relationship between the liver cells and blood in the sinusoids. As a result, the liver is not able to eliminate toxic substances normally, and they can get in the body. To a minor extent, digestion in the intestine also is reduced.
What are the symptoms and signs of cirrhosis?
Patients with cirrhosis may have few or no symptoms and signs of liver disease. Some of the symptoms may be nonspecific, that is, they don’t suggest that the liver is their cause. Some of the more common symptoms and signs of cirrhosis include:
- Yellowing of the skin (jaundice) due to the accumulation of bilirubin in the blood
- Fatigue
- Weakness
- Loss of appetite
- Itching
- Easy bruising from decreased production of blood clotting factors by the diseased liver.
Patients with cirrhosis also develop symptoms and signs from the complications of cirrhosis that are discussed next.
What are the complications of cirrhosis?
Edema and ascites
As cirrhosis of the liver becomes severe, signals are sent to the kidneys to retain salt and water in the body. The excess salt and water first accumulates in the tissue beneath the skin of the ankles and legs because of the effect of gravity when standing or sitting. This accumulation of fluid is called edema or pitting edema. (Pitting edema refers to the fact that pressing a fingertip firmly against an ankle or leg with edema causes an indentation in the skin that persists for some time after release of the pressure. Actually, any type of pressure, such as from the elastic band of a sock, may be enough to cause pitting.) The swelling often is worse at the raze of a day after standing or sitting and may lessen overnight as a result of the loss of the effects of gravity when lying down. As cirrhosis worsens and more salt and water are retained, fluid also may secure in the abdominal cavity between the abdominal wall and the abdominal organs. This accumulation of fluid (called ascites ) causes swelling of the abdomen, abdominal discomfort, and increased weight.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP)
Fluid in the abdominal cavity (ascites) is the perfect place for bacteria to grow. Normally, the abdominal cavity contains a very small amount of fluid that is able to resist infection well, and bacteria that enter the abdomen (usually from the intestine) are killed or find their way into the portal vein and to the liver where they are killed. In cirrhosis, the fluid that collects in the abdomen is unable to resist infection normally. In addition, more bacteria find their method from the intestine into the ascites. Therefore, infection within the abdomen and the ascites, referred to as spontaneous bacterial peritonitis or SBP, is likely to occur. SBP is a life- threatening complication. Some patients with SBP have no symptoms, while others have fever, chills, abdominal pain and tenderness, diarrhea, and worsening ascites.
Bleeding from esophageal varices
In the cirrhotic liver, the scar tissue blocks the flow of blood returning to the heart from the intestines and raises the pressure in the portal vein (portal hypertension). When pressure in the portal vein becomes high enough, it causes blood to flow around the liver through veins with lower pressure to reach the heart. The most approved veins through which blood bypasses the liver are the veins lining the lower part of the esophagus and the upper part of the stomach.
As a result of the increased flow of blood and the resulting increase in pressure, the veins in the lower esophagus and upper stomach expand and then are referred to as esophageal and gastric varices; the higher the portal pressure, the larger the varices and the more likely a patient is to bleed from the varices into the esophagus or stomach.
Bleeding from varices usually is severe and, without immediate treatment, can be fatal. Symptoms of bleeding from varices include vomiting blood (the vomitus can be red blood mixed with clots or “coffee grounds” in appearance, the latter due to the effect of acid on the blood), passing stool that is black and tarry due to changes in the blood as it passes through the intestine (melena), and orthostatic dizziness or fainting (caused by a drop in blood pressure especially when standing up from a lying station).
Bleeding also may occur from varices that form elsewhere in the intestines, for example, the colon, but this is rare. For reasons yet unknown, patients hospitalized because of actively bleeding esophageal varices have a high risk of developing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Hepatic encephalopathy
Some of the protein in food that escapes digestion and absorption is former by bacteria that are normally display in the intestine. While using the protein for their own purposes, the bacteria make substances that they release into the intestine. These substances then can be absorbed into the body. Some of these substances, for example, ammonia, can have toxic effects on the brain. Ordinarily, these toxic substances are carried from the intestine in the portal vein to the liver where they are removed from the blood and detoxified.
As previously discussed, when cirrhosis is indicate, liver cells cannot function normally either because they are damaged or because they have lost their normal relationship with the blood. In addition, some of the blood in the portal vein bypasses the liver through other veins. The result of these abnormalities is that toxic substances cannot be removed by the liver cells, and, instead, the toxic substances accumulate in the blood.
When the toxic substances regain sufficiently in the blood, the function of the brain is impaired, a condition called hepatic encephalopathy. Sleeping during the day rather than at night (reversal of the normal sleep pattern) is among the earliest symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy. Other symptoms include irritability, inability to concentrate or perform calculations, loss of memory, confusion, or depressed levels of consciousness. Ultimately, severe hepatic encephalopathy causes coma and death.
The toxic substances also make the brains of patients with cirrhosis very sensitive to drugs that are normally filtered and detoxified by the liver. Doses of many drugs that normally are detoxified by the liver have to be reduced to avoid a toxic buildup in cirrhosis, particularly sedatives and drugs that are used to promote sleep. Alternatively, drugs may be used that do not need to be detoxified or eliminated from the body by the liver, for example, drugs that are eliminated by the kidneys.
Hepatorenal syndrome
Patients with worsening cirrhosis can develop the hepatorenal syndrome. This syndrome is a serious complication in which the function of the kidneys is reduced. It is a functional problem in the kidneys, that is, there is no physical damage to the kidneys. Instead, the reduced function is due to changes in the device the blood flows through the kidneys themselves. The hepatorenal syndrome is defined as progressive failure of the kidneys to clear substances from the blood and earn adequate amounts of urine even though some other important functions of the kidney, such as retention of salt, are maintained. If liver function improves or a healthy liver is transplanted into a patient with hepatorenal syndrome, the kidneys usually begin to work normally. This suggests that the reduced function of the kidneys is the result of the accumulation of toxic substances in the blood when the liver fails. There are two types of hepatorenal syndrome. One type occurs gradually over months. The other occurs rapidly over a week or two.
Hepatopulmonary syndrome
Rarely, some patients with advanced cirrhosis can develop the hepatopulmonary syndrome. These patients can experience difficulty breathing because clear hormones released in advanced cirrhosis cause the lungs to function abnormally. The basic problem in the lung is that not enough blood flows through the diminutive blood vessels in the lungs that are in contact with the alveoli (air sacs) of the lungs. Blood flowing through the lungs is shunted around the alveoli and cannot pick up enough oxygen from the air in the alveoli. As a result the patient experiences shortness of breath, particularly with inconvenience.
Hypersplenism
The spleen normally acts as a filter to remove older red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets (small particles that are important for the clotting of blood.). The blood that drains from the spleen joins the blood in the portal vein from the intestines. As the pressure in the portal vein rises in cirrhosis, it increasingly blocks the flow of blood from the spleen. The blood “backs-up” and accumulates in the spleen, and the spleen swells in size, a condition referred to as splenomegaly. Sometimes, the spleen is so swollen that it causes abdominal pain.
As the spleen enlarges, it filters out more and more of the blood cells and platelets until their numbers in the blood are reduced. Hypersplenism is the term veteran to describe this condition, and it is associated with a low red blood cell count (anemia), low white blood cell count (leucopenia), and/or a indecent platelet count (thrombocytopenia). The anemia can cause weakness, the leucopenia can lead to infections, and the thrombocytopenia can impair the clotting of blood and result in prolonged bleeding.
Liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma)
Cirrhosis due to any cause increases the risk of primary liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma). Primary refers to the fact that the tumor originates in the liver. A secondary liver cancer is one that originates elsewhere in the body and spreads (metastasizes) to the liver.
The most common symptoms and signs of well-known liver cancer are abdominal wound and swelling, an enlarged liver, weight loss, and fever. In addition, liver cancers can produce and release a number of substances, including ones that cause an increased in red blood cell count (erythrocytosis), low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), and high blood calcium (hypercalcemia ).
What are the common causes of cirrhosis?
- Alcohol is a very common cause of cirrhosis, particularly in the Western world. The development of cirrhosis depends upon the amount and regularity of alcohol intake. Chronic, high levels of alcohol consumption injure liver cells. Thirty percent of individuals who drink daily at least eight to sixteen ounces of hard liquor or the equivalent for fifteen or more years will develop cirrhosis. Alcohol causes a range of liver diseases; from simple and uncomplicated fatty liver (steatosis), to the more serious fatty liver with inflammation (steatohepatitis or alcoholic hepatitis), to cirrhosis.
- Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) refers to a wide spectrum of liver diseases that, like alcoholic liver disease, ranges from simple steatosis, to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), to cirrhosis. All stages of NAFLD have in common the accumulation of fat in liver cells. The term nonalcoholic is used because NAFLD occurs in individuals who do not consume excessive amounts of alcohol, yet, in many respects, the microscopic picture of NAFLD is similar to what can be seen in liver disease that is due to excessive alcohol. NAFLD is associated with a condition called insulin resistance, which, in turn, is associated with the metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus type 2. Obesity is the most important cause of insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, and type 2 diabetes. NAFLD is the most common liver disease in the United States and is responsible for 24% of all liver disease. In fact, the number of livers that are transplanted for NAFLD-related cirrhosis is on the rise. Public health officials are skittish that the current epidemic of obesity will dramatically increase the development of NAFLD and cirrhosis in the population.
- Cryptogenic cirrhosis (cirrhosis due to unidentified causes) is a common reason for liver transplantation. It is termed cryptogenic cirrhosis because for many years doctors have been unable to explain why a proportion of patients developed cirrhosis. Doctors now acquire that cryptogenic cirrhosis is due to NASH (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) caused by long standing obesity, type 2 diabetes, and insulin resistance. The burly in the liver of patients with NASH is believed to disappear with the onset of cirrhosis, and this has made it difficult for doctors to make the connection between NASH and cryptogenic cirrhosis for a long time. One important clue that NASH leads to cryptogenic cirrhosis is the finding of a high occurrence of NASH in the new livers of patients undergoing liver transplant for cryptogenic cirrhosis. Finally, a study from France suggests that patients with NASH have a similar risk of developing cirrhosis as patients with long standing infection with hepatitis C virus. (See discussion that follows.) However, the progression to cirrhosis from NASH is thought to be slow and the diagnosis of cirrhosis typically is made in patients in their sixties.
- Chronic viral hepatitis is a condition where hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus infects the liver for years. Most patients with viral hepatitis will not develop chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis. For example, the majority of patients infected with hepatitis A recover completely within weeks, without developing chronic infection. In contrast, some patients infected with hepatitis B virus and most patients infected with hepatitis C virus design chronic hepatitis, which, in turn, causes progressive liver afflict and leads to cirrhosis, and, sometimes, liver cancers.
- Inherited (genetic) disorders result in the accumulation of toxic substances in the liver which lead to tissue damage and cirrhosis. Examples include the abnormal accumulation of iron (hemochromatosis) or copper (Wilson’s disease). In hemochromatosis, patients inherit a tendency to occupy an excessive amount of iron from food. Over time, iron accumulation in different organs throughout the body causes cirrhosis, arthritis, heart muscle damage leading to heart failure, and testicular dysfunction causing loss of sexual drive. Treatment is aimed at preventing damage to organs by removing iron from the body through bloodletting (removing blood). In Wilson disease, there is an inherited abnormality in one of the proteins that controls copper in the body. Over time, copper accumulates in the liver, eyes, and brain. Cirrhosis, tremor, psychiatric disturbances and other neurological difficulties occur if the condition is not treated early. Treatment is with oral medication that increases the amount of copper that is eliminated from the body in the urine.
- Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a liver disease caused by an abnormality of the immune system that is found predominantly in women. The abnormal immunity in PBC causes chronic inflammation and destruction of the small bile ducts within the liver. The bile ducts are passages within the liver through which bile travels to the intestine. Bile is a fluid produced by the liver that contains substances required for digestion and absorption of fat in the intestine, as well as other compounds that are waste products, such as the pigment bilirubin. (Bilirubin is produced by the breakdown of hemoglobin from old red blood cells.). Along with the gallbladder, the bile ducts make up the biliary tract. In PBC, the destruction of the diminutive bile ducts blocks the normal slip of bile into the intestine. As the inflammation continues to destroy more of the bile ducts, it also spreads to destroy nearby liver cells. As the destruction of the hepatocytes proceeds, scar tissue (fibrosis) forms and spreads throughout the areas of destruction. The combined effects of progressive inflammation, scarring, and the toxic effects of accumulating waste products culminates in cirrhosis.
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is an uncommon disease found frequently in patients with ulcerative colitis . In PSC, the large bile ducts outside of the liver become inflamed, narrowed, and obstructed. Obstruction to the flow of bile leads to infections of the bile ducts and jaundice and eventually causes cirrhosis. In some patients, injury to the bile ducts (usually as a result of surgery) also can cause obstruction and cirrhosis of the liver.
- Autoimmune hepatitis is a liver disease caused by an abnormality of the immune system that is found more commonly in women. The abnormal immune activity in autoimmune hepatitis causes progressive inflammation and destruction of liver cells (hepatocytes), leading ultimately to cirrhosis.
- Infants can be born without bile ducts (biliary atresia) and ultimately create cirrhosis. Other infants are born lacking essential enzymes for controlling sugars that leads to the accumulation of sugars and cirrhosis. On rare occasions, the absence of a specific enzyme can cause cirrhosis and scarring of the lung (alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency).
- Less common causes of cirrhosis include unusual reactions to some drugs and prolonged exposure to toxins, as well as chronic heart failure (cardiac cirrhosis). In certain parts of the world (particularly Northern Africa), infection of the liver with a parasite (schistosomiasis) is the most common cause of liver disease and cirrhosis.
How is cirrhosis diagnosed and evaluated?
The single best test for diagnosing cirrhosis is biopsy of the liver. Liver biopsies, however, carry a small risk for serious complications, and, therefore, biopsy often is reserved for those patients in whom the diagnosis of the type of liver disease or the presence of cirrhosis is not clear. The possibility of cirrhosis may be suggested by the history, physical examination, or routine testing. If cirrhosis is present, other tests can be broken-down to determine the severity of the cirrhosis and the presence of complications. Tests also may be used to diagnose the underlying disease that is causing the cirrhosis. The following are some examples of how doctors discover, diagnose and evaluate cirrhosis:
- In taking a patient’s history, the physician may narrate a history of excessive and prolonged intake of alcohol, a history of intravenous drug abuse, or a history of hepatitis. These pieces of information suggest the possibility of liver disease and cirrhosis.
- Patients who are known to have chronic viral hepatitis B or C have a higher probability of having cirrhosis.
- Some patients with cirrhosis have enlarged livers and/or spleens. A doctor can often feel (palpate) the lower edge of an enlarged liver below the right rib cage and feel the tip of the enlarged spleen below the left rib cage. A cirrhotic liver also feels firmer and more unique than a normal liver.
- Some patients with cirrhosis, particularly alcoholic cirrhosis, have petite red spider-like markings (telangiectasias) on the skin, particularly on the chest, that are made up of enlarged, radiating blood vessels. These spider telangiectasias also can be seen in individuals without liver disease, however.
- Jaundice (yellowness of the skin and of the whites of the eyes due to elevated bilirubin in the blood) is celebrated among patients with cirrhosis, but jaundice can occur in patients with liver diseases without cirrhosis and other conditions such as hemolysis (excessive rupture down of red blood cells).
- Swelling of the abdomen (ascites) and/or the lower extremities (edema) due to retention of fluid is common among patients with cirrhosis though other diseases can cause them commonly, e.g., congestive heart failure.
- Patients with abnormal copper deposits in their eyes or certain types of neurologic disease may have Wilson’s disease, a genetic disease in which there is abnormal handling and accumulation of copper throughout the body, including the liver, that can lead to cirrhosis.
- Esophageal varices may be found unexpectedly during upper endoscopy (EGD), and they strongly suggesting cirrhosis.
- Computerized tomography (CT or CAT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans and ultrasound examinations of the abdomen done for reasons other than evaluating the possibility of liver disease may unexpectedly detect enlarged livers, abnormally nodular livers, enlarged spleens, and fluid in the abdomen that suggest cirrhosis.
- Advanced cirrhosis leads to a reduced level of albumin in the blood and reduced blood clotting factors due to the loss of the liver’s ability to produce these proteins. Thus, reduced levels of albumin in the blood or abnormal bleeding suggest cirrhosis.
- Abnormal elevation of liver enzymes in the blood (such as ALT and AST) that are obtained routinely as part of yearly health examinations suggests inflammation or injury to the liver from many causes as well as cirrhosis.
- Patients with elevated levels of iron in their blood may have hemochromatosis, a genetic disease of the liver in which iron is handled abnormally and which leads to cirrhosis.
- Auto-antibodies (antinuclear antibody, anti-smooth muscle antibody and anti-mitochondrial antibody) sometimes are detected in the blood and may be a clue to the presence of autoimmune hepatitis or primary biliary cirrhosis, both of which can lead to cirrhosis.
- Liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma) may be detected by CT and MRI scans or ultrasound of the abdomen. Liver cancer most commonly develops in individuals with underlying cirrhosis.
- If there is an accumulation of fluid in the abdomen, a sample of the fluid can be removed using a long needle. The fluid then can be examined and tested. The results of testing may suggest the presence of cirrhosis as the cause of the fluid.
How is cirrhosis treated?
Treatment of cirrhosis includes 1) preventing further damage to the liver, 2) treating the complications of cirrhosis, 3) preventing liver cancer or detecting it early, and 4) liver transplantation.
Preventing further damage to the liver
- Consume a balanced diet and one multivitamin daily. Patients with PBC with impaired absorption of chunky soluble vitamins may need additional vitamins D and K.
- Avoid drugs (including alcohol) that cause liver pain. All patients with cirrhosis should avoid alcohol. Most patients with alcohol induced cirrhosis experience an improvement in liver function with abstinence from alcohol. Even patients with chronic hepatitis B and C can substantially slice liver pain and slow the progression towards cirrhosis with abstinence from alcohol.
- Avoid nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs, e.g., ibuprofen). Patients with cirrhosis can experience worsening of liver and kidney function with NSAIDs.
- Eradicate hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus by using anti-viral medications. Not all patients with cirrhosis due to chronic viral hepatitis are candidates for drug treatment. Some patients may experience serious deterioration in liver function and/or intolerable side effects during treatment. Thus, decisions to treat viral hepatitis have to be individualized, after consulting with doctors experienced in treating liver diseases (hepatologists).
- Remove blood from patients with hemochromatosis to reduce the levels of iron and prevent further damage to the liver. In Wilson’s disease, medications can be used to increase the excretion of copper in the urine to reduce the levels of copper in the body and prevent further damage to the liver.
- Suppress the immune system with drugs such as prednisone and azathioprine (Imuran) to decrease inflammation of the liver in autoimmune hepatitis.
- Treat patients with PBC with a bile acid preparation, ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), also called ursodiol (Actigall). Results of an analysis that combined the results from several clinical trials showed that UDCA increased survival among PBC patients during 4 years of therapy. The development of portal hypertension also was reduced by the UDCA. It is important to ticket that despite producing clear benefits, UDCA treatment primarily retards progression and does not cure PBC. Other medications such as colchicine and methotrexate also may have abet in subsets of patients with PBC.
- Immunize patients with cirrhosis against infection with hepatitis A and B to prevent a serious deterioration in liver function. There are currently no vaccines available for immunizing against hepatitis C.
Treating the complications of cirrhosis
Edema and ascites. Retention of salt and water can lead to swelling of the ankles and legs (edema) or abdomen (ascites) in patients with cirrhosis. Doctors often convey patients with cirrhosis to restrict dietary salt (sodium) and fluid to decrease edema and ascites. The amount of salt in the diet usually is restricted to 2 grams per day and fluid to 1.2 liters per day. In most patients with cirrhosis, however, salt and fluid restriction is not enough, and diuretics have to be added.
Diuretics are medications that work in the kidneys to promote the elimination of salt and water into the urine. A combination of the diuretics spironolactone (Aldactone) and furosemide can reduce or eliminate the edema and ascites in most patients. During treatment with diuretics, it is important to monitor the function of the kidneys by measuring blood levels of blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine to choose if too much diuretic is being used. Too much diuretic can lead to kidney dysfunction that is reflected in elevations of the BUN and creatinine levels in the blood.
Sometimes, when the diuretics do not work (in which case the ascites is said to be refractory), a long needle or catheter is used to draw out the ascitic fluid directly from the abdomen, a procedure called abdominal paracentesis. It is common to withdraw ample amounts (liters) of fluid from the abdomen when the ascites is causing painful abdominal distension and/or difficulty breathing because it limits the movements of the diaphragms.
Another treatment for refractory ascites is a arrangement called transjugular intravenous portosystemic shunting (TIPS, see below).
Bleeding from varices. If large varices accomplish in the esophagus or upper stomach, patients with cirrhosis are at risk for serious bleeding due to rupture of these varices. Once varices have bled, they tend to rebleed and the probability that a patient will die from each bleeding episode is high (30%-35%). Therefore, treatment is necessary to prevent the first (initial) bleeding episode as well as rebleeding. Treatments include medications and procedures to decrease the pressure in the portal vein and procedures to destroy the varices.
- Propranolol (Inderal), a beta blocker, is effective in lowering pressure in the portal vein and is used to prevent initial bleeding and rebleeding from varices in patients with cirrhosis. Another class of oral medications that lowers portal pressure is the nitrates, for example, isosorbide dinitrate ( Isordil). Nitrates often are added to propranolol if propranolol alone does not adequately lower portal pressure or prevent bleeding.
- Octreotide (Sandostatin) also decreases portal vein pressure and has been used to treat variceal bleeding.
- During upper endoscopy (EGD), either sclerotherapy or band ligation can be performed to obliterate varices and stop active bleeding and prevent rebleeding. Sclerotherapy involves infusing small doses of sclerosing solutions into the varices. The sclerosing solutions cause inflammation and then scarring of the varices, obliterating them in the process. Band ligation involves applying rubber bands around the varices to obliterate them. (Band ligation of the varices is analogous to rubber banding of hemorrhoids.) Complications of sclerotherapy include esophageal ulcers, bleeding from the esophageal ulcers, esophageal perforation, esophageal stricture (narrowing due to scarring that can cause dysphagia), mediastinitis (inflammation in the chest that can cause chest pain), pericarditis (inflammation around the heart that can cause chest pain), and peritonitis (infection in the abdominal cavity). Studies have shown that band ligation may be slightly more effective with fewer complications than sclerotherapy.
- Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) is a non-surgical procedure to decrease the pressure in the portal vein. TIPS is performed by a radiologist who inserts a stent (tube) through a neck vein, down the inferior vena cava and into the hepatic vein within the liver. The stent then is placed so that one end is in the high pressure portal vein and the other extinguish is in the low pressure hepatic vein. This tube shunts blood around the liver and by so doing lowers the pressure in the portal vein and varices and prevents bleeding from the varices. TIPS is particularly useful in patients who fail to reply to beta blockers, variceal sclerotherapy, or banding. (TIPS also is useful in treating patients with ascites that do not respond to salt and fluid restriction and diuretics.) TIPS can be passe in patients with cirrhosis to prevent variceal bleeding while the patients are waiting for liver transplantation. The most common side effect of TIPS is hepatic encephalopathy. Another major problem with TIPS is the development of narrowing and occlusion of the stent, causing recurrence of portal hypertension and variceal bleeding and ascites. The estimated frequency of stent occlusion ranges from 30%-50% in 12 months. Fortunately, there are methods to initiate occluded stents. Other complications of TIPS include bleeding due to inadvertent puncture of the liver capsule or a bile duct, infection, heart failure, and liver failure.
- A surgical operation to create a shunt (passage) from the high-pressure portal vein to veins with lower pressure can lower blood spin and pressure in the portal vein and prevent varices from bleeding. One such surgical procedure is called distal splenorenal shunt (DSRS). It is appropriate to assume such a surgical shunt for patients with portal hypertension who have early cirrhosis. (The risks of major shunt surgery in these patients is less than in patients with advanced cirrhosis.) During DSRS, the surgeon detaches the splenic vein from the portal vein, and attaches it to the renal vein. Blood then is shunted from the spleen around the liver, lowering the pressure in the portal vein and varices and preventing bleeding from the varices.
Hepatic encephalopathy. Patients with an abnormal sleep cycle, impaired thinking, odd behavior, or other signs of hepatic encephalopathy usually should be treated with a low protein diet and oral lactulose. Dietary protein is restricted because it is a source of the toxic compounds that cause hepatic encephalopathy. Lactulose, which is a liquid, traps the toxic compounds in the colon. Consequently, they cannot be absorbed into the blood stream and cause encephalopathy. To be sure that adequate lactulose is present in the colon at all times, the patient should adjust the dose to beget 2-3 semiformed bowel movements a day. (Lactulose is a laxative, and the adequacy of treatment can be judged by loosening or increasing frequency of stools.) If symptoms of encephalopathy persist, oral antibiotics such as neomycin or metronidazole (Flagyl), can be added to the treatment regimen. Antibiotics work by blocking the production of the toxic compounds by the bacteria in the colon.
Hypersplenism. The filtration of blood by an enlarged spleen usually results in only mild reductions of red blood cells (anemia), white blood cells (leukopenia) and platelets (thrombocytopenia) that do not require treatment. Severe anemia, however, may require blood transfusions or treatment with erythropoietin or epoetin alfa (Epogen, Procrit), hormones that stimulate the production of red blood cells. If the numbers of white blood cells are severely reduced, another hormone called granulocyte-colony stimulating factor is available to increase the numbers of white blood cells. An example of one such factor is filgrastim (Neupogen).
No approved medication is available yet to increase the number of platelets. As a necessary precaution, patients with low platelets should not use aspirin or other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) since these drugs can hinder the function of platelets. If a low number of platelets is associated with significant bleeding, transfusions of platelets usually should be given. Surgical removal of the spleen (called splenectomy) should be avoided, if possible, because of the risk of excessive bleeding during the operation and the risk of anesthesia in advanced liver disease.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP). Patients suspected of having spontaneous bacterial peritonitis usually will undergo paracentesis. Fluid that is removed is examined for white blood cells and cultured for bacteria. Culturing involves inoculating a sample of the ascites into a bottle of nutrient-rich fluid that encourages the growth of bacteria, thus facilitating the identification of even small numbers of bacteria. Blood and urine samples often are obtained as well for culturing because many patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis also will have infection in their blood and urine. In fact, many doctors believe that infection may have begun in the blood and the urine and spread to the ascitic fluid to cause spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Most patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis are hospitalized and treated with intravenous antibiotics such as ampicillin, gentamycin, and one of the newer generation cephalosporin. Patients usually treated with antibiotics include:
- Patients with blood, urine, and/or ascites fluid cultures that contain bacteria.
- Patients without bacteria in their blood, urine, and ascitic fluid but who have elevated numbers of white blood cells (neutrophils) in the asciticfluid(>250 neutrophils/cc). Elevated neutrophil numbers in ascitic fluid often means that there is bacterial infection. Doctors believe that the lack of bacteria with culturing in some patients with increased neutrophils is due either to a very small number of bacteria or ineffective culturing techniques.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a serious infection. It often occurs in patients with advanced cirrhosis whose immune systems are weak, but with modern antibiotics and early detection and treatment, the prognosis of recovering from an episode of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is good.
In some patients oral antibiotics (such as Cipro or Septra) can be prescribed to prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Not all patients with cirrhosis and ascites should be treated with antibiotics to prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, but some patients are at high risk for developing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and warrant preventive treatment:
- Patients with cirrhosis who are hospitalized for bleeding varices have a high risk of developing spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and should be started on antibiotics early during the hospitalization to prevent spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Patients with recurring episodes of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Patients with low protein levels in the ascitic fluid (Ascitic fluid with low levels of protein is more likely to become infected.)
Prevention and early detection of liver cancer
Several types of liver disease that cause cirrhosis are associated with a particularly high incidence of liver cancer, for example, hepatitis B and C, and it would be useful to screen for liver cancer since early surgical treatment or transplantation of the liver can cure the patient of cancer. The difficulty is that the methods available for screening are only partially effective, identifying at best only 50% of patients at a curable stage of their cancer. Despite the partial effectiveness of screening, most patients with cirrhosis, particularly hepatitis B and C, are screened yearly or every six months with ultrasound examination of the liver and measurements of cancer-produced proteins in the blood, e.g. alpha fetoprotein.
Liver transplantation
Cirrhosis is irreversible. Many patients’ liver function will gradually worsen despite treatment and complications of cirrhosis will increase and become difficult to treat. Therefore, when cirrhosis is far advanced, liver transplantation often is the only option for treatment. Recent advances in surgical transplantation and medications to prevent infection and rejection of the transplanted liver have greatly improved survival after transplantation. On average, more than 80% of patients who receive transplants are alive after five years. Not everyone with cirrhosis is a candidate for transplantation. Furthermore, there is a shortage of livers to transplant, and there usually is a long (months to years) wait before a liver for transplanting becomes available. Therefore, measures to retard the progression of liver disease and treat and prevent complications of cirrhosis are vitally important.
What is new and in the future for cirrhosis?
Progress in the management and prevention of cirrhosis continues. Research is ongoing to determine the mechanism of scar formation in the liver and how this process of scarring can be interrupted or even reversed. Newer and better treatments for viral liver disease are being developed to prevent the progression to cirrhosis. Prevention of viral hepatitis by vaccination, which is available for hepatitis B, is being developed for hepatitis C. Treatments for the complications of cirrhosis are being developed or revised and tested continually. Finally, research is being directed at identifying new proteins in the blood that can detect liver cancer early or predict which patients will develop liver cancer.Cirrhosis At A Glance
- Cirrhosis is a complication of liver disease which involves loss of liver cells and irreversible scarring of the liver.
- Alcohol and viral hepatitis B and C are common causes of cirrhosis, although there are many other causes.
- Cirrhosis can cause weakness, loss of appetite, easy bruising, yellowing of the skin (jaundice), itching, and fatigue.
- Diagnosis of cirrhosis can be suggested by the history, physical examination and blood tests, and can be confirmed by liver biopsy.
- Complications of cirrhosis include edema and ascites, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, bleeding from varices, hepatic encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome, hepatopulmonary syndrome, hypersplenism, and liver cancer.
- Treatment of cirrhosis is designed to prevent further damage to the liver, treat complications of cirrhosis, and preventing or detecting liver cancer early.
- Transplantation of the liver is becoming an important option for treating patients with advanced cirrhosis.
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Filed under Stomach Band by on Aug 3rd, 2010.