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Portal Hypertension in children: approach and evaluation

 


PORTAL HYPERTENSION in Children

Q1: What is portal hypertension?


portal venous pressure > 12 mm Hg   

or portal pressure gradient (between IVC and portal vein) >5 mm Hg 

Currently, the most commonly used parameter is the Hepatic Venous Pressure Gradient (HVPG) [the difference between the wedged (WHVP) and the free hepatic venous pressures]


Pressure = Flow x Resistance

(Resistance increases due to active myofibroblast or vascular smooth muscle cells in intrahepatic veins; and overall liver disease;  Flow  increases due to splanchnic arteriolar dilatation by release of endogenous vasodilators)


(portal veins start and end as capillaries and no valves; please vide the picture on porto-caval anastomosis sites)



Q2: What are the 3 key components of portal hypertension?


  • Splenomegaly

  • Ascites

  • Varix (Esophageal varices/ Gastro-esophageal varices/ Isolated gastric varices/ Rectal varices)


Q3: What are the causes of portal hypertension? 


[Here is a list of causes of portal hypertension. For details of each entity, please view the table below.]

  • Pre-sinusoidal

    • EHPVO (extrahepatic portal venous obstruction)

    • NCPF (non cirrhotic portal fibrosis)

    • CHF (congenital hepatic fibrosis)

    • Schistosomiasis 

    • Myeloproliferative 

  • Sinusoidal

    • CLD (chronic liver disease)

  • Post-sinusoidal

    • VOD (veno-occlusive disease) 

    • BCS (budd-Chiari syndrome) 

    • CP (Constrictive pericarditis) 

    • TR (Tricuspid regurgitation) 


Q3: What are the complications of portal hypertension:


  • Hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS)

  • Portopulmonary syndrome (PPS)

  • Portal biliopathy

  • Minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE)

  • Hypersplenism

  • Growth failure

Q4: What are the risk factors for development of EHPVO, NCPF, BCS?


  • Hypercoagulable states

    • Protein C deficiency

    • Protein S deficiency

    • Antithrombin III deficiency

    • Factor V Leiden mutation

    • MTHFR mutation

    • Prothrombin mutation

    • Myeloproliferative disorders

    • Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria

    • Antiphospholipid syndrome (APLA)

    • Nephrotic syndrome

    • Cancer

    • Pregnancy

    • Use of oral contraceptives

  • Intra-abdominal causes:

    • umbilical vein catheterisation

    • Intra-abdominal infection, appendicitis

    • Chronic pancreatitis- splenic vein thrombosis

    • Diarrhoea, endotoxin absorption 

    • Intra abdominal surgery

    • Peritoneal dialysis

    • Endoscopic sclerotherapy

    • Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)

    • Behcet syndrome

    • Tumoral invasion: Hepatocellular carcinoma, Renal-cell carcinoma, Adrenal carcinoma

  • Idiopathic

Q5: How to work up a case of portal hypertension?


  • For etiological evaluation: 

    • USG abdomen and Doppler of Hepatic vein, IVC

    • CT Portal Venogram (usually prior to surgical operation)

    • Fibroscan of liver

    • Liver function tests LFT

  • For varix assessment:

    • Upper GI Endoscopy-- find the grade of varix and decide on prophylaxis (eg. Propranolol, Serial endoscopic program) 

  • Associated underlying etiology evaluation: 

    • Thrombophilia work up, Protein C, S, MTHFR, F-V LM etc

  • For complication evaluation:

    • Check SpO2, PaO2 if cyanosed or  suspected Hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS)

    • Hypersplenism- check CBC or blood counts

    • Growth parameters evaluation

    • Check LFT for suspected portal biliopathy



PORTAL HYPERTENSION (pHTN): Causes & evaluation  

etiology

Pointers

Management (Mx)

PRE-SINUSOIDAL

Extra hepatic portal venous obstruction (EHPVO)



(good livers but bad veins)



m/c cause of pHTN in children in India

  • Age: 1st or 2nd decade, usually 5-6 yr age

  • UGI Bleed: hematemesis, malena (usually about 80% children present with UGI bleed below 20 year age)

  • Splenomegaly (commonly seen, mild<6cm/ moderate 6-10cm/ massive >10cm)

  • Usually no Hepatomegaly/ cirrhosis/ ascites/ jaundice (as the liver gets another blood supply from Hepatic artery)

  • Stunted growth (dt splenomegaly compressing the stomach leading to early satiety and deprivation of hepatotropic growth factors like insulin and glucagon)

  • Look for complications like portal biliopathy etc

  • Doppler PV: visible thrombus, portal cavernoma, proximal dilatation, tortuous portal vein, PV diameter >17mm, absence of respiratory phasicity, demonstration of collaterals like LGV>7mm, collaterals of >1.7 times the aortic calibre

  • CT/MR  Portovenogram

  • Predisposing factors evaluation (see risk factors) 

  • ACUTE Portal vein thrombosis: usually due to septicemia and dehydration following severe diarrhoea leading to abdominal pain (due to small bowel ischemia and intestinal infarction causing acute abdomen), progressive ascites. mortality is often high. 

Mx goal: 

  • prevent bleeding (primary prophylaxis). 

  • manage acute bleeding. 

  • prevent recurrent bleed (secondary prophylaxis). 


Mx strategies: 

  • Serial endoscopic variceal management programme

  • Propranolol prophylaxis

  • Growth supplements

  • Splenectomy/  Devascularization 

Noncirrhotic portal fibrosis (NCPF)

  • clinical features same as EHPVO except for usual age of presentation adulthood (25-35yrs)

  • obliterative portal venopathy, involves small and medium sized branches of portal vein. 

  • USG & Doppler: main portal vein mostly spared, microthrombi in branches can be detected. nodularity in the liver may be detected due to nodular regenerative hyperplasia. 

  • CT/MR  Portovenogram

Management is moreover similar to EHPVO

Schistosomiasis (Hepatosplenic form)


Schistosoma mansoni & 

Schistosoma japonicum



second most common parasitemia worldwide (after Malaria)


lay eggs in presinusoidal venules, leading to granulomatous inflammation

  • UGI bleeding

  • Splenomegaly

  • Hepatomegaly (usually left lobe)

  • lack of typical physical changes of liver dysfunction like jaundice, spider nevi, palmar erythema, ascites, gynecomastia

  • Repeated stool examinations Schistosoma mansoni eggs;

  • schistosoma antibodies by serological test

  • CBC: sometimes eosinophilia

  • Liver biopsy: the fibrosis is restricted to the portal area, with preservation of the lobular architecture of the liver (c.f.  cirrhosis, fibrosis starts around portal tracts or hepatic veins and spreads forming bridges between hepatic and portal veins)

  • praziquantel 40 mg/kg

  • Variceal banding

  • TIPS for severe portal hypertension (take Liver biopsy for microbiological evaluation and histopathology)

  • esophagogastric devascularization with splenectomy

Congenital Hepatic fibrosis (CHF)


due to  deficiency of the terminal branches of the portal vein in the fibrotic portal zone.

  • Hepatomegaly (due to hepatic fibrosis) with stony hard consistency of liver. 

  • Splenomegaly

  • GI bleed (less common)

  • associated with: ciliopathies that affect kidneys like polycystic kidney disease (PKD), nephronophthisis (NPHP) chronic tubulointerstitial disease

  • Imaging like USG, MRI of liver and kidney

  • Fibroscan

  • Liver Biopsy: similar to cirrhosis (but clinically with preserved liver function)

  • Genetic testing: clinical exome

  • symptomatic and supportive

  • Management of complications

  • Genetic counselling of parents

Myeloproliferative disease 


Mechanism:

 i. infiltration of portal zones with cells like RBC, platelets causing increased viscosity. ii. platelet dysfunction causing thrombosis.

iii. cirrhosis of liver 

  • Chronic symptoms- fever, bone pain, petechiae, repeated infections, Splenomegaly

  • thrombosis may include various other parts of body including deep vein thrombosis (DVTs) 

  • Bone marrow biopsy: diagnostic most of the time

  • Clinical exome or mutation study (including JAK2 mutation)

  • evaluate for: primary myelofibrosis, polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, hypereosinophilic syndrome, Systemic mastocytosis and CML, Hodgkins

  • Manage portal hypertension with beta blocker and endoscopic variceal ligation

  • Treat the underlying etiology (by oncologist or hematologist)

SINUSOIDAL

Chronic liver disease (CLD)/ Cirrhosis

  • look for Common causes like:

  • Hep B, Hep C, Autoimmune hepatitis, Galactosemia, GSD, HFI, a1-AT deficiency, Wilson, Drug induced-Mtx, INH

  • UGIB: hematemesis, malena

  • Splenomegaly (may regress after large GI bleed- Smith Howard syndrome)

  • Hepatomegaly/ cirrhosis/ ascites/ jaundice

  • e/o CLD: palmar erythema, spider angioma, clubbing, edema

  • USG Abdomen

  • Fibroscan

  • Ascites Mx: Diuretics, low salt diet

  • Varix Mx: endoscopy, beta blocker.

  • Etiology Mx: like antivirals for HBV and HCV, Chelation for Wilsons, Immunosuppressants for autoimmune disease etc.

POST- SINUSOIDAL

Veno-occlusive disease (VOD) or 

Hepatic sinusoidal obstruction syndrome (HSOS)


It is nonthrombotic obliterative process

  • predisposing factors: 

transplant, plant alkaloids (herbal tea), irradiation, drugs- immunosuppressants, anticancer drugs (cyclophosphamide)

  • typically presents in the days or weeks after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) with refractory thrombocytopenia, hepatomegaly, ascites, and jaundice,

  • Doppler USG:  increased phasicity of portal veins with eventual development of portal flow reversal

  • Liver biopsy: for definitive diagnosis (difficult to diagnose by imaging)

  • Severity grading (in adult post HCT)  [based on: Time from emergence of first clinical symptoms to diagnosis ≤4 days/ Bilirubin:≥5 mg/dL, Doubling <48 hour/  Transaminases >5 times upper limit of normal/ Weight gain >5 percent/ Renal function ≥1.5 times baseline at transplant]

  • Supportive care: analgesia, diuretics

  • Defibrotide may be tried

  • High dose methylprednisolone (after screening for infections)

  • TIPS

  • Liver transplant 

Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS)

or 



Hepatic venous outflow tract obstruction (HVOTO)

+- IVC obstruction


  • Usually triad of - Abdominal pain, Hepatomegaly, Ascites

  • in acute/ fulminant form: nausea, vomiting, jaundice

  • in chronic/ subacute form: splenomegaly, varix, abdominal vein dilatation

  • [look for evidence of coagulopathy, encephalopathy and hepatorenal syndrome__indicates poor prognosis and warrants urgent relief of obstruction]

  • USG Doppler (IOC) (Sn,Sp 85%): non-visualisation of HV

  • Confirm by Hepatic venography: ‘Spider web pattern’ 

  • USG: Caudate lobe hypertrophy (GB edema may misdiagnosed as cholecystitis)

  • Rule out cardiac causes: Abdomino-jugular reflux + Echo

  • Liver Biopsy: nutmeg liver appearance (Zone 3 necrosis and congestion)

  • Etiological work up: thrombotic/ APLA etc

Control ascites: restrict Na, Lasilactone

LVP+Albumin with Lasix

Anti-coagulant:

Heparin (acute stage)

Warfarin (target INR 2-2.5)


  • Thrombolytic therapy

  • Anticoagulant

  • Screen for varices & b-blocker prophylaxis

  • Ascites control: with diuretics

  • Angioplasty

  • TIPS

  • Surgical Shunt: side to side portacaval, central splenorenal, mesocaval, (meso atrial if IVC block)

  • Liver transplant


Constrictive pericarditis (CP)

&

Tricuspid regurgitation

  • can be suspected by cardiovascular system examination (Pulse, JVP, BP, precordial examination)

  • Confirmed by echocardiography, CXR

  • manage with diuretics, cardiac remodelling agents etc

  • treat the underlying etiology



For author information: sabyasachimistri@gmail.com

Dr Sabya, MD, Pediatrics, (AIIMS)


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