Liver Diseases in Children

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Neonatal Cholestasis - Yellow Baby Riddles

  • Definition: Jaundice >14 days (term), >21 days (preterm) + conjugated hyperbilirubinemia (Direct Bilirubin >1 mg/dL if Total Bilirubin <5 mg/dL; OR >20% of Total Bilirubin if Total Bilirubin >5 mg/dL).
  • Initial Step: Fractionate bilirubin (conjugated vs. unconjugated).
  • Key Conditions:

    FeatureBiliary Atresia (BA)Neonatal Hepatitis Syndrome (NHS)
    OnsetProgressive, 2-8 weeksVariable
    StoolsAcholic (clay-colored)Pigmented / intermittently acholic
    USGTriangular cord sign, absent/small GBNormal/small GB, no dilated ducts
    HIDA ScanNo excretion into bowelDelayed or normal excretion
    Liver BiopsyBile duct proliferation, portal fibrosis, bile plugsGiant cell transformation, inflammation
    ManagementKasai portoenterostomy (ideal <8 weeks), TransplantSupportive, ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA)

⭐ Early diagnosis of Biliary Atresia is critical; Kasai portoenterostomy performed before 60 days of age has the best prognosis for establishing bile flow and delaying liver transplantation.

Metabolic Liver Diseases - Inborn Errors Unveiled

Key metabolic liver diseases with genetic underpinnings:

PAS-positive diastase-resistant globules

DiseaseGene / DefectKey ManifestationsDiagnosis HighlightsManagement Key
Wilson's DiseaseATP7B / ↓Cu excr.Liver (cirrhosis), Neuro (basal ganglia), KF rings↓Ceruloplasmin, ↑Urinary Cu (>100 $\mu$g/24h)Chelators (Penicillamine), Zinc
A1AT DeficiencySERPINA1 (PiZZ)Neonatal hepatitis, Cirrhosis, Emphysema (later)↓A1AT levels, PAS+ diastase-resistant globules (liver)Supportive, Liver transplant
Galactosemia (GALT)GALTMilk intolerance (vomiting, FTT), Cataracts, E.coli sepsis↑RBC Gal-1-P, Non-glucose reducing substances (urine)Galactose/Lactose-free diet
Tyrosinemia Type 1FAHAcute liver failure, Renal tubular dysfxn, ↑HCC risk↑Succinylacetone (urine/blood)NTBC, Low Tyr/Phe diet

Viral Hepatitis in Children - Tiny Livers Attacked

  • Hepatitis A (HAV) & E (HEV):
    • Transmission: Fecal-oral (e.g., contaminated water).
    • Course: Acute, generally self-limiting. ⚠️ HEV can be severe in pregnant women.
    • Prevention: Hygiene, sanitation. HAV vaccine available.
  • Hepatitis B (HBV):
    • Transmission: Primarily vertical (mother-to-child); also parenteral.
    • Risk: High chronicity if perinatal (>90%).
    • Markers: HBsAg (infection), HBeAg (high infectivity), Anti-HBs (immunity).
    • Prevention: Universal infant vaccination (birth dose within 24h, then 0, 1, 6 months); HBIG for exposed neonates.
  • Hepatitis C (HCV):
    • Transmission: Vertical; parenteral (less common in children).
    • Risk: High chronicity (~50-80%).
    • Management: Screening (anti-HCV Ab, HCV RNA); Direct-Acting Antivirals (DAAs) available.

Hepatitis B Serological Markers Timeline

⭐ Perinatal transmission of HBV results in chronic infection in over 90% of cases.

Acute Liver Failure in Children - Sudden Liver Shock

  • Definition: INR ≥1.5 with encephalopathy OR INR ≥2.0 without encephalopathy; no pre-existing liver disease.
  • Causes: 📌 Paracetamol toxicity, Autoimmune hepatitis, Viral hepatitis (A,B,E), Metabolic disorders (e.g., Wilson's, tyrosinemia).
  • Clinical Features: Jaundice, coagulopathy (↑INR, bleeding), encephalopathy (graded), hypoglycemia, cerebral edema (↑ICP).
  • Management Principles: ICU supportive care (glucose, FFP), identify & treat cause (e.g., N-acetylcysteine for paracetamol), manage complications, urgent liver transplant evaluation.

⭐ Paracetamol toxicity is a leading reversible cause of ALF in children; prompt N-acetylcysteine (NAC) administration is life-saving.

Chronic Liver Disease in Children - Long-Term Liver Woes

  • Causes: Post-Biliary Atresia, chronic viral hepatitis, metabolic/genetic, autoimmune, NAFLD/MASLD.
  • Complications: Portal hypertension (varices, ascites, splenomegaly), hepatic encephalopathy, coagulopathy, malnutrition/growth failure.
  • Management: Address complications (diuretics, beta-blockers, nutritional support). PELD/MELD scores guide prognosis. Chronic Liver Disease Progression and Complications

⭐ Growth failure is a significant and often early complication of CLD in children.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Neonatal cholestasis: Differentiate biliary atresia (urgent Kasai) from neonatal hepatitis complex.
  • Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency: PAS-positive, diastase-resistant globules in liver; common genetic cause.
  • Wilson's disease: Copper overload; low ceruloplasmin, ↑ urinary copper, K-F rings, neuro-hepatic symptoms.
  • Reye's syndrome: Aspirin + viral illness → acute fatty liver & encephalopathy, ↑ ammonia.
  • Alagille syndrome: Bile duct paucity, butterfly vertebrae, distinct facies, pulmonary stenosis, cholestasis.
  • PFIC: Genetic cholestasis (e.g., ATP8B1, ABCB11, ABCB4); types 1, 2, 3 with distinct gene defects.

Practice Questions: Liver Diseases in Children

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Hepatitis B infection spreads through all of the following routes except

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Flashcards: Liver Diseases in Children

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Anomalies associated with biliary atresia include:_____Situs inversusAbsent vena cava_____ portal vein

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Anomalies associated with biliary atresia include:_____Situs inversusAbsent vena cava_____ portal vein

Polysplenia; Preduodenal

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