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Hepatobiliary Disorders

Liver cirrhosis is a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by the degeneration and destruction of liver cells. The most common type is Laennec's cirrhosis, caused by alcohol toxicity. Other types include postnecrotic cirrhosis from severe liver disease, and primary or secondary biliary cirrhosis from bile duct damage or obstruction. Alcohol causes fatty liver, cell necrosis, scarring and vascular changes leading to portal hypertension, decreased nutrient absorption and complications. Biliary cirrhosis results from bile duct obstruction causing bile accumulation, necrosis and scarring. Cardiac cirrhosis is from congested blood flow due to heart failure. Nursing care focuses on monitoring for complications and teaching patients to avoid alcohol and manage

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
862 views2 pages

Hepatobiliary Disorders

Liver cirrhosis is a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by the degeneration and destruction of liver cells. The most common type is Laennec's cirrhosis, caused by alcohol toxicity. Other types include postnecrotic cirrhosis from severe liver disease, and primary or secondary biliary cirrhosis from bile duct damage or obstruction. Alcohol causes fatty liver, cell necrosis, scarring and vascular changes leading to portal hypertension, decreased nutrient absorption and complications. Biliary cirrhosis results from bile duct obstruction causing bile accumulation, necrosis and scarring. Cardiac cirrhosis is from congested blood flow due to heart failure. Nursing care focuses on monitoring for complications and teaching patients to avoid alcohol and manage

Uploaded by

FreeNursingNotes
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HEPATOBILIARY DISORDERS

LIVER CIRRHOSIS
Irreversible chronic inflammatory disease characterized by
massive degeneration and destruction of hepatocytes.

Types
1. Laennec’s cirrhosis - the most common
- Caused by the toxic effect of alcohol
- Occurs primarily in middle-aged men
2. Postnecrotic cirrhosis
- Results from severe liver disease
3. Post - acute viral or chemical hepatitis
4. Primary biliary cirrhosis
- inflammation and intrahepatic bile duct destruction.
5. Secondary biliary cirrhosis
- chronic partial or complete common bile duct obstruction due
to gall stones, pancreatitis or tumor.
6. Cardiac cirrhosis - results from right-sided CHF.

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Laennec’s Cirrhosis
Alcohol causes changes --- fatty infiltration of the hepatocytes --- liver
cell necrosis and scarring --- as it progresses, inflammation decreases
but fibrosis increases --- liver distortion --- structural (biliary channel)
and vascular changes.
Scar tissue formation and irregular hepatocyte regeneration ---
compression of portal vein --- obstruction --- portal hypertension

Decreased Vitamin ADEK absorption


➔ bleeding tendencies
➔ poor calcium transport
➔ poor skin turgor
➔ visual disturbances
Depletion of glycogen --- hypoglycemia
Decreased albumin --- decreased COP --- anasarca
Increased HP --- ascites
Decreased bilirubin metabolism --- hyperbilirubinemia --- jaundice

MANIFESTATIONS POSTNECROTIC - SAME AS LAENNEC’S CIRRHOSIS

Biliary cirrhosis
Chronic obstruction --- increased pressure in the hepatic bile duct ---
accumulation of bile --- areas of necrosis --- edema, fibrosis and
hepatocellular destruction --- scar tissue destruction --- hepatomegaly

Hyperbilirubenemia
Jaundice
Pruritus
clay-colored stools
RUQ pain.

CARDIAC CIRRHOSIS
Enlarged liver --- congested venous blood flow --- failure of the heart to
pump blood to different areas of the body.
Congestion causes anoxia to the liver --- necrosis and fibrosis

HEPATORENAL SYNDROME

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A major complication of cirrhosis characterized by renal failure in an
anatomically normal kidneys --- progressive oliguria and azotemia.

Nursing Interventions
1. Assess for signs of bleeding
2. Monitor V/S and laboratory results (platelets, creatininine)
3. Monitor I/O.
4. Monitor daily weight and abdominal girth to detect
ascites.
5. Administer the following as ordered to combat symptoms:
a. Vitamin K
b. Stool softeners
c. Diuretics
6. Assess for changes in cardiac output, decreased renal
function and electrolyte imbalances.
7. Assess for impaired skin integrity related to edema,
ascites and pruritus.
8. Use preventive measures to keep skin intact.
9. Assess the patient for signs of impaired breathing related
to congestion or infection.
10. Relieve breathing difficulty.
11. Observe for signs of encephalopathy (lethargy, confusion,
personality changes, motor changes, depression, irritability).
12. Teach ways to decrease bleeding tendencies.

Patient teaching:
1. Nutritional needs
2. Avoidance of alcohol
3. Drug interactions related to decreased liver function.
4. Enough rest
5. Signs and symptoms needing medical intervention.
6. Provide counseling for the patient and family.

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