Code Orange
Gulp Gulp
Hep Hep Hurray
The big C
The big C 2
100

Charcot's Triad

upper abdominal pain, fever and jaundice

100

Medical therapy to assist with alcohol use disorder 

naltrexone, acamprosate
100

What is the main cause of HCC 

HBV infection-can occur in the absence of cirrhosis

Cirrhosis secondary to chronic hepatitis C, annual incidence of HCC is 1%-8%, in patients with chronic HBV the annual incidence is 1%-15% 

100

How common is liver cirrhosis present in cases of HCC in Western countries?

cirrhosis is present in 90% of patients with HCC, most of the presenting symptoms are due to cirrhosis rather than underlying carcinoma 

100

What labs would you get if evaluating a patient with cirrhosis in the ED 

CBC-thrombocytopenia, anemia 

INR, ammonia, bilirubin, albumin 

BMP-hyponatremia 

200

Reynold's pentad 

(right upper quadrant pain, jaundice, and fever) with shock (low blood pressure, tachycardia) and an altered mental status

200

What is it called when an alcohol use disorder pt starts having persistent alteration of consciousness and sympathetic hyperactivity due to alcohol withdrawal

What is Delirium Tremens

(onset is usually 72-96hrs)

200

What is the screening modality for HCC 

Ultrasound every six months 

200

Presenting symptoms of patients with HCC 

1. Primary: mild to moderate upper abdominal pain, weight loss, early satiety, or a palpable mass in the upper abdomen 

2. Paraneoplastic syndromes: hypoglycemia, erythrocytosis, hypercalcemia

3. obstructive jaundice (rare) 

200

What percentage of American patients with RCC have resectable disease?

5%

ideal patient for resection has a solitary HCC confined to the liver that shows no radiographic evidence of invasion of the hepatic vasculature, no evidence of portal hypertension, and well-preserved hepatic function, CP A 

stage IIIB, IVA, or IVB disease to be incurable by resection. These stages are defined by invasion of a major portal or hepatic vein, direct invasion of organs other than the gallbladder, perforation of the visceral peritoneum, and nodal as well as distant metastase

300

30 yo female with BMI of 30, six hours of mid-epigastric pain, radiating to right shoulder. tachycardia and mid-epigastric pain. AST 180, ALT 190, Alk P 200, Bili 5.0. US showing dilated common bile duct, contracted gallbladder, no visible stone. RUQ showing dilated CBD, contracted gallbladder, no stone

What is choledocholelithiasis

300

How many hours after cessation of alcohol can a pt have uncomplicated onset of alcohol withdrawl (anxiety, tremor, headache, n/v, sweating, etc)

What is 6-24hrs

300

Who should receive screening for HCC

1. patients with cirrhosis, Child-Pugh class A and B 

2. patient with cirrhosis and CP class C awaiting liver transplantation 

3. Noncirrhotic patients with hepatitis B virus and any of the following: active hepatitis, family history, african americans, asian males>40, females>50 

300

What is an elevated AFP

AFP>20 ng/ml is a commonly used threshold to trigger evaluation for HCC 

In a study with 1800 patient with chronic liver disease AFP>20 has 60% sensitivity and 80% specificity 

300

Which patients can qualify for liver transplant 

eligible patients have a solitary HCC ≤5 cm in diameter or up to three separate lesions, none of which is larger than 3 cm; no evidence of gross vascular invasion; and no regional nodal or distant metastases (the Milan criteria)

400

44 yo male with AUD, recently sober, recent admission for alcoholic hepatitis admitted to your clinic. With spider angiomas and palmar erythema. ALT 28, AST 31, Alk P 31, T bili 1.3, Alb 2.9, Plt 101k. Next step?

EGD to screen for esophageal varices 


varices grade 2 or higher, ppx BB 

no varices screening EGD 2-3y 

400

What is the scale system we use to monitor alcohol withdrawal?

CIWA

(>9 score may require the start of ativan)

400

Name five sequelae of cirrhosis 

ascites, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, hepatic encephalopathy, portal hypertension, variceal bleeding, and hepatorenal syndrome

400

What are the five categories of a child-pugh score

Ascites, Encephalopathy, Bilirubin, Albumin, INR 

Child–Pugh A = 5–6 points, Child–Pugh B = 7–9 points, Child–Pugh C = ≥10 points

400

Treatment for  HCC with CPB or CPC 

Radiofrequency ablation, microwave ablation, cryoablation, arterial embolization +/- TACE (chemotherapeutic agent, with or without lipiodol or a procoagulant material, into the hepatic artery)

500

Antibiotics for a patient complaining of fever, RUQ, with an obstructing stone on US 

piperacillin/tazobactam (Zosyn, 3.375 g IV q6h or 4.5 g IV q8h), ampicillin/sulbactam (Unasyn, 3 g IV q6h), or meropenem (Merrem, 1 g IV q8h)

500

What are the three benzos that are given to alcohol withdrawal pts because they are less toxic to the liver?

What is Lorazepam, Oxazepam, and Temazepam


500

Patient with MDD, AST 105, ALT 120. HEp B surface antigen and core ab positive, neg hep B surface antibody or e antigen. HB DNA viral load 50,000. Tx?

if HBV viral load >2000 and AST is greater than 2x upper limit of normal. start tenofovir or entecavir 

interferon avoided in depression 

500

What can be used in substitution for a liver biopsy in high risk patients 

LI RADS

(non-rim) arterial phase hyperenhancement

nonperipheral "washout": a visual assessment of relative hypointensity of the lesion compared with background liver on the portal venous and delayed phases

enhancing capsule/pseudocapsule

threshold growth: diameter increase ≥50% increase in ≤6 months

500

Percentage of risk for adverse complication in liver biopsy 

2.4%