Hepatomegaly: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
[[File:Sobo 1906 389.png|thumb|Inferior view of the liver with surface showing lobes and impressions.]] | [[File:Sobo 1906 389.png|thumb|Inferior view of the liver with surface showing lobes and impressions.]] | ||
* | *Hepatomegaly is an enlarged liver, palpable below the right costal margin or >12cm in the midclavicular line on imaging | ||
* | *In the ED, hepatomegaly is typically discovered incidentally on exam or imaging, or presents with RUQ pain/fullness | ||
*Key EM considerations: differentiate benign causes (fatty liver, hepatic congestion) from emergent conditions ([[Budd-Chiari syndrome]], acute liver failure, hepatic abscess) | |||
*May indicate underlying serious disease: heart failure, malignancy, cirrhosis with decompensation | |||
==Clinical Features== | |||
[[File:PMC3830333 IJEM-17-283-g003.png|thumb|Hepatomegaly palpable on exam in a pediatric patient.]] | |||
[[File:Hepatomegaly4.jpg|thumb|Hepatomegaly on exam in an adult patient.]] | |||
== | ===History=== | ||
*RUQ fullness, pain, or discomfort | |||
*Jaundice, dark urine, pale stools | |||
*Abdominal distension (ascites) | |||
*Weight loss, fatigue, malaise (malignancy, chronic liver disease) | |||
*Alcohol use, medication/supplement history (hepatotoxins) | |||
*Risk factors for hepatitis (travel, IV drug use, sexual history, blood transfusions) | |||
*Dyspnea, orthopnea, edema (right heart failure) | |||
*Prior cancer history (metastases) | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
*Palpable liver edge below right costal margin | |||
* | *Percussion span >12cm in midclavicular line (normal: 6-12cm) | ||
* | *Liver character: smooth (congestion, fatty liver) vs. nodular (cirrhosis, metastases) vs. tender (hepatitis, congestion, abscess) | ||
* | *Stigmata of chronic liver disease: spider angiomata, palmar erythema, gynecomastia, caput medusae, ascites | ||
*Splenomegaly (portal hypertension, hematologic malignancy) | |||
*JVD, peripheral edema (right heart failure, hepatic congestion) | |||
*Hepatojugular reflux (congestive hepatopathy) | |||
===Red Flags=== | |||
*Rapidly enlarging liver with pain (hepatic hemorrhage, Budd-Chiari, acute liver failure) | |||
*Hepatomegaly + jaundice + coagulopathy + encephalopathy (acute liver failure) | |||
*Hepatomegaly + fever + sepsis (hepatic abscess) | |||
*New-onset ascites | |||
*Hemodynamic instability | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{Hepatomegaly DDX}} | {{Hepatomegaly DDX}} | ||
===By Mechanism=== | |||
*'''Congestion''': right heart failure, Budd-Chiari syndrome, constrictive pericarditis, IVC obstruction | |||
*'''Inflammation''': viral hepatitis (A, B, C, EBV, CMV), alcoholic hepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis, drug-induced hepatotoxicity, hepatic abscess (pyogenic, amebic) | |||
*'''Infiltration''': fatty liver (NAFLD/NASH), amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, glycogen storage diseases | |||
*'''Malignancy''': hepatocellular carcinoma, metastatic disease (colon, breast, lung most common), lymphoma, leukemia | |||
*'''Biliary''': biliary obstruction, primary biliary cholangitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis | |||
==Evaluation== | ==Evaluation== | ||
[[File:Liver measurements on ultrasonography.jpg|thumb|Evaluating liver size on ultrasound.]] | |||
[[File:Se000.jpg|thumb|Hepatomegaly on CT.]] | |||
[[ | ===Laboratory=== | ||
*'''[[LFTs]]''': AST, ALT (hepatocellular injury), alkaline phosphatase, GGT (cholestatic), bilirubin | |||
[[ | *'''Coagulation studies (PT/INR)''': marker of synthetic function — elevated in acute liver failure | ||
*'''Albumin''': marker of synthetic function | |||
*[[CBC]]: thrombocytopenia (portal hypertension/hypersplenism), elevated WBC (infection, leukemia) | |||
* | *[[BMP]]: renal function (hepatorenal syndrome), glucose | ||
*'''[[Acetaminophen toxicity|Acetaminophen level]]''' and toxicology screen if acute liver injury suspected | |||
*[[Acute hepatitis]] serologies (HAV IgM, HBsAg, HBc IgM, HCV Ab) for acute hepatocellular pattern | |||
**[[ | *[[Lactate]] if concern for sepsis or shock liver | ||
* | *Consider: ammonia (encephalopathy), autoimmune markers (ANA, ASMA), ceruloplasmin (Wilson's) | ||
** | |||
===Imaging=== | |||
*'''[[RUQ US]]''': first-line imaging — evaluates liver size, echotexture, masses, biliary dilation, ascites, hepatic vein patency | |||
*'''[[POCUS]]''': rapid assessment for ascites, hepatic congestion, IVC dilation (right heart failure) | |||
*'''CT abdomen with contrast''': mass characterization, abscess identification, vascular evaluation | |||
*Doppler ultrasound if Budd-Chiari suspected (hepatic vein thrombosis) | |||
===CHF Workup=== | |||
*If congestive hepatopathy suspected: [[BNP]], [[ECG]], [[echocardiography]] | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*Treat underlying condition | *Treat underlying condition | ||
*Treat [[ | *'''Acute liver failure''': ICU admission, hepatology/transplant consultation, [[N-acetylcysteine]] if acetaminophen toxicity suspected, correct coagulopathy only if actively bleeding or procedural need | ||
*'''Hepatic abscess''': IV antibiotics, IR-guided drainage, ID consultation | |||
*'''Budd-Chiari''': anticoagulation, IR consultation for TIPS, hepatology | |||
*'''Congestive hepatopathy''': treat underlying heart failure | |||
*'''Hepatic decompensation''': manage ascites, encephalopathy (lactulose), GI bleeding as indicated | |||
*Treat [[hepatic dysfunction]] if present | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
===Admit=== | |||
*Acute liver failure | |||
*Hepatic abscess | |||
*New decompensated cirrhosis (ascites, encephalopathy, variceal bleed) | |||
*Budd-Chiari syndrome | |||
*Hemodynamic instability | |||
*Suspected hepatic malignancy requiring urgent workup | |||
* | ===Discharge=== | ||
*Incidental finding with stable labs and no acute symptoms — outpatient GI/hepatology follow-up | |||
*Known chronic liver disease without acute decompensation | |||
*Return precautions: jaundice, confusion, abdominal swelling, bleeding, fever | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Hepatitis]] | |||
*[[Acute liver failure]] | |||
*[[Cirrhosis]] | |||
*[[Hepatic dysfunction]] | |||
*[[Right upper quadrant abdominal pain]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:GI]] | [[Category:GI]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | [[Category:Symptoms]] | ||
Revision as of 23:51, 20 March 2026
Background
- Hepatomegaly is an enlarged liver, palpable below the right costal margin or >12cm in the midclavicular line on imaging
- In the ED, hepatomegaly is typically discovered incidentally on exam or imaging, or presents with RUQ pain/fullness
- Key EM considerations: differentiate benign causes (fatty liver, hepatic congestion) from emergent conditions (Budd-Chiari syndrome, acute liver failure, hepatic abscess)
- May indicate underlying serious disease: heart failure, malignancy, cirrhosis with decompensation
Clinical Features
History
- RUQ fullness, pain, or discomfort
- Jaundice, dark urine, pale stools
- Abdominal distension (ascites)
- Weight loss, fatigue, malaise (malignancy, chronic liver disease)
- Alcohol use, medication/supplement history (hepatotoxins)
- Risk factors for hepatitis (travel, IV drug use, sexual history, blood transfusions)
- Dyspnea, orthopnea, edema (right heart failure)
- Prior cancer history (metastases)
Physical Exam
- Palpable liver edge below right costal margin
- Percussion span >12cm in midclavicular line (normal: 6-12cm)
- Liver character: smooth (congestion, fatty liver) vs. nodular (cirrhosis, metastases) vs. tender (hepatitis, congestion, abscess)
- Stigmata of chronic liver disease: spider angiomata, palmar erythema, gynecomastia, caput medusae, ascites
- Splenomegaly (portal hypertension, hematologic malignancy)
- JVD, peripheral edema (right heart failure, hepatic congestion)
- Hepatojugular reflux (congestive hepatopathy)
Red Flags
- Rapidly enlarging liver with pain (hepatic hemorrhage, Budd-Chiari, acute liver failure)
- Hepatomegaly + jaundice + coagulopathy + encephalopathy (acute liver failure)
- Hepatomegaly + fever + sepsis (hepatic abscess)
- New-onset ascites
- Hemodynamic instability
Differential Diagnosis
Hepatic Dysfunction
Infectious
- Hepatitis
- Malaria
- HIV (present in 50% of AIDS patients)[1]
- EBV
- Babesiosis, leptospirosis
- Typhoid
- Hepatic abscess, amebiasis
Neoplastic
Metabolic
Biliary
- Biliary cirrhosis
Drugs
- Alcoholic cirrhosis
- Alcoholic hepatitis
- Hepatotoxic drugs
Miscellaneous
- Other causes of cirrhosis
- Autoimmune hepatitis
- Veno-occlusive disease
- CHF (right heart failure)
By Mechanism
- Congestion: right heart failure, Budd-Chiari syndrome, constrictive pericarditis, IVC obstruction
- Inflammation: viral hepatitis (A, B, C, EBV, CMV), alcoholic hepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis, drug-induced hepatotoxicity, hepatic abscess (pyogenic, amebic)
- Infiltration: fatty liver (NAFLD/NASH), amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, glycogen storage diseases
- Malignancy: hepatocellular carcinoma, metastatic disease (colon, breast, lung most common), lymphoma, leukemia
- Biliary: biliary obstruction, primary biliary cholangitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis
Evaluation
Laboratory
- LFTs: AST, ALT (hepatocellular injury), alkaline phosphatase, GGT (cholestatic), bilirubin
- Coagulation studies (PT/INR): marker of synthetic function — elevated in acute liver failure
- Albumin: marker of synthetic function
- CBC: thrombocytopenia (portal hypertension/hypersplenism), elevated WBC (infection, leukemia)
- BMP: renal function (hepatorenal syndrome), glucose
- Acetaminophen level and toxicology screen if acute liver injury suspected
- Acute hepatitis serologies (HAV IgM, HBsAg, HBc IgM, HCV Ab) for acute hepatocellular pattern
- Lactate if concern for sepsis or shock liver
- Consider: ammonia (encephalopathy), autoimmune markers (ANA, ASMA), ceruloplasmin (Wilson's)
Imaging
- RUQ US: first-line imaging — evaluates liver size, echotexture, masses, biliary dilation, ascites, hepatic vein patency
- POCUS: rapid assessment for ascites, hepatic congestion, IVC dilation (right heart failure)
- CT abdomen with contrast: mass characterization, abscess identification, vascular evaluation
- Doppler ultrasound if Budd-Chiari suspected (hepatic vein thrombosis)
CHF Workup
- If congestive hepatopathy suspected: BNP, ECG, echocardiography
Management
- Treat underlying condition
- Acute liver failure: ICU admission, hepatology/transplant consultation, N-acetylcysteine if acetaminophen toxicity suspected, correct coagulopathy only if actively bleeding or procedural need
- Hepatic abscess: IV antibiotics, IR-guided drainage, ID consultation
- Budd-Chiari: anticoagulation, IR consultation for TIPS, hepatology
- Congestive hepatopathy: treat underlying heart failure
- Hepatic decompensation: manage ascites, encephalopathy (lactulose), GI bleeding as indicated
- Treat hepatic dysfunction if present
Disposition
Admit
- Acute liver failure
- Hepatic abscess
- New decompensated cirrhosis (ascites, encephalopathy, variceal bleed)
- Budd-Chiari syndrome
- Hemodynamic instability
- Suspected hepatic malignancy requiring urgent workup
Discharge
- Incidental finding with stable labs and no acute symptoms — outpatient GI/hepatology follow-up
- Known chronic liver disease without acute decompensation
- Return precautions: jaundice, confusion, abdominal swelling, bleeding, fever
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Tintanelli's
