Splenomegaly, ascites, caput medusae (tortuous veins over abdominal wall with flow away from umbilicus), esophageal or gastric varices, massive gastrointestinal bleed.
Synthetic Function: Low serum albumin and prolonged prothrombin time (PT/INR) unresponsive to vitamin K indicate poor synthetic function.
Hepatic Injury: Transaminases mildly or moderately elevated.
Cholestasis: Elevated alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT).
Metabolic Derangement: Elevated serum ammonia correlates with significant liver dysfunction and portosystemic shunting.
Imaging And Histology
Abdominal Ultrasonography: Assesses liver size, echotexture, nodularity, biliary dilatation, ascites, and splenomegaly. Doppler study evaluates portal, splenic, or hepatic vein block and portosystemic shunts.
Transient Elastography (FibroScan): Noninvasive measurement of liver stiffness; assesses moderate to higher grades of fibrosis; replaces need for serial liver biopsies.
Liver Biopsy: Gold standard for histological diagnosis, assessment of fibrosis, metal quantification (copper), and enzyme activity. Scoring systems include Metavir (stages I-IV) and Ishak score (stages I-V).
Severity Scoring
Child score and Pediatric End-Stage Liver Disease (PELD) score assess degree of liver dysfunction and predict mortality.
PELD calculates risk using bilirubin, albumin, INR, growth failure, and age.
Major Complications
Complication
Pathophysiology And Features
Portal Hypertension
Increased intrahepatic resistance leading to variceal bleeding, splenomegaly (hypersplenism with cytopenia).
Hepatic Encephalopathy
Neuropsychiatric abnormalities resulting from liver dysfunction; graded via specific criteria.
Ascites And Peritonitis
Fluid accumulation due to portal hypertension and hypoalbuminemia; increased risk for spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Hepatorenal Syndrome
Functional, reversible renal impairment defined as severe acute kidney injury without other known causes.
Hepatopulmonary Syndrome
Triad of chronic liver disease, intrapulmonary vascular dilations, and hypoxemia; causes dyspnea, cyanosis, and clubbing.
Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Increased risk in cirrhotic livers; requires surveillance.
Management Protocol
Nutritional Rehabilitation
Provide adequate caloric intake targeting 125% of recommended daily allowances based on ideal body weight.
Supply protein at 2-3 g/kg/day in infants and 1-2 g/kg/day in older children.
Strictly avoid protein restriction in encephalopathic patients.
Utilize medium-chain triglycerides for fat calories.
Supplement aqueous fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) and monitor serum levels.
Evaluate triene-to-tetraene ratio (<0.3) for essential fatty acid deficiency.
Pruritus: Ursodeoxycholic acid, rifampicin, phenobarbitone, cholestyramine, or naltrexone.
Variceal Bleed Prophylaxis: Nonselective beta-blockers, endoscopic variceal band ligation.
Immunizations: Ensure complete childhood vaccination schedule, specifically hepatitis A and B vaccines.
Surveillance: Perform abdominal ultrasound and serum alpha-fetoprotein screening every 6 months to detect hepatocellular carcinoma.
Definitive Surgical Therapy
Liver Transplantation: Only definitive therapy for end-stage liver disease, decompensated cirrhosis, refractory portal hypertension, severe growth failure, or hepatopulmonary syndrome.
Allocate organs utilizing PELD/MELD scoring systems prioritizing severity of decompensation.