|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Case Report | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Volume 4, Number 3, June 2011, pages 127-130 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Hepatic Encephalopathy in Connection With Budd-Chiari Syndrome due to Infection With Echinococcus
Multilocularis: A Case
Report
Ahmet Cumhur
Dulgera, Ozgur Kemikb, Fatih Selvic,
Huseyin Begenikd, e, Habib Emred, Fatih Mehmet
Erdurd
aDepartment
of Gastroenterology, Medical Faculty, Yuzuncu Yil University, Van,
Turkey
Manuscript accepted for publication April
6, 2011
Abstract
Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) is a hepatic
venous outflow block generally resulting from disorders affecting
hepatic venous system. Elevated hepatic venous pressure results in
portal hypertension. BCS may also cause hepatic encephalopathy.
Echinococcus multilocularis is a tapeworm parasite and the natural
course of the disease may affect liver parenchyma as well as hepatic
venous tree. It is the most terrible parasitic disease of the liver and
is easily confused with hepatic malignancies. Albendazole therapy may
suppress disease progression. Alveolar echinococcosis of the liver
rarely causes Budd-Chiari syndrome-related hepatic encephalopathy (HE).
We report a rare case of alveolar echinococcosis-related BCS with HE,
who was successfully managed by rifaximin and albendazole. Keywords: Budd-Chiari syndrome; Hepatic encephalopathy; Alveolar echinococcosis
Introduction Echinococcus multilocularis (EM) is a cestode parasite and adult worms of the parasite are chiefly found in the small intestines of the carnivores. Humans almost always contribute to the disease cycles as accidental intermediate hosts [1]. The disease is mainly hyperendemic in the entire rural, fox living areas of northern hemisphere as well as in Turkey [2]. Natural course of the disease may go beyond borders of the liver and may cause obstruction of biliary tract as well as hepatic venous system. As a result, the disease mimics a primary malignant liver tumor [3]. Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) is characterized by hepatic venous outflow tract obstruction due to a primary venous disease or secondary related to compression or invasion by an adjacent lesion [4]. The patients with worm-damaged hepatic venous system may present with BCS, which gradually leads to ascites, abdominal pain and hepatomegaly [5]. Hepatic failure mostly occurs as a result of massive liver destruction. It is characterized by weakness, jaundice, disorientation, personality changes, flapping tremor (asterixis), prolonged phrothrombin time and hyperammonemia [6].
Alveolar echinococcosis has rarely been
implicated in development of hepatic failure. Herein we report a rare
case of 57-year-old woman who had E. multilocularis associated
BCS which was caused by acute hepatic failure. Case Report
A 57-year-old Turkish woman presented to
an emergency department with a 7-day history of fever, jaundice,
abdominal distention, personality changes, slurred speech, and
constipation. The patient was born in a village and lived in the eastern
part of Turkey. The patient had a history of hepatic Echinococcus
multilocularis, which had been diagnosed 8 years earlier, and she was
receiving oral albendazole at a dose of 800 mg per day. At the time of
evaluation, she appeared ill. He had a temperature of 38.2
°C, a blood pressure of 80/50 mm
Hg, and a heart rate of 86 beats per minute. Her conjunctivas were
icteric. There was moderate hepatomegaly with tense ascites. There was
no splenomegaly. Her neurologic examination showed flapping tremor (asterixis)
and somnolence. The remainder of the physical examination was normal.
Blood tests showed a white-cell count of 11,800/mm3.
An automatic differential cell count revealed 52% eosinophils, 40%
neutrophils, and 8% lymphocytes. The hemoglobin level was 10 g/dl, the
platelet count was 209,000/mm3,
the prothrombine time was 17 seconds, and D-dimer level was 5.5 (normal
range, 0 to 0.5). The serum sodium level was 125 mmol/L; chloride, 102
mmol/L; potassium, 3.8 mmol/L; bicarbonate, 21 mmol/L; blood urea
nitrogen, 10 mg/dl; creatinine, 0.7 mg/dl; glucose, 80 mg/dl; albumin
level, 2.8 g/dl; globulin level 4.8 g/dl; aspartate aminotransferase
level, 56 U/L (normal range, 0 to 41); alanine aminotransferase level,
48 U/L (normal range, 0 to 40); alkaline phosphatase level, 378 U/L
(normal range, 40 to 125); gammaglutamyl transferase level 121 U/L
(normal range, 0 to 45) and total bilirubin level, 8 mg/dl (normal
range, 0.0 to 0.8 ). Blood ammonia level was 212 mmol/L (normal range 11
- 51) and C-reactive protein level was 48 U/L (normal range 0 - 5). The
ELISA test for E. multilocularis was also positive.
Discussion Human infection with E. multilocularis causing severe Budd-Chiari Syndrome-related hepatic encephalopathy was presented. Alveolar echinococcosis is a zoonotic illness caused by infection with Echinococcus multilocularis which is a cestode fluke. The liver disease in echinococcosis results from the significant destruction of the hepatic parenchyma by the parasitary cysts [7]. Echinococcus multilocularis (alveolar echinococcosis) prevalence varies significantly, depending on geographical location. The disease is hyperendemic in coldest climates of the rural areas, where humans and foxes contact closely, with weak infrastructure. Foxes are definitive hosts of the tapeworm. When dispersed eggs are taken by human, oncospheres are released into the duodenum. They penetrate deep into the intestinal wall and enter the vessels of the portal venous tract, and they usually reach to the liver which is the most suitable organ for producing the hydatid cysts. They also can spread to pulmonary system, brain and skeleton. As part of their nature, these cysts perform an obscure devastating effect on the liver as well as hepatic venous outflow system [8, 9]. The vast majority of cases suffer right upper abdominal pain, jaundice or constitutional symptoms like fatigue or weight loss. The most frequent complications of the disease are biliary cholangitis and sepsis. Indirect laboratory findings of alveolar echinococcosis of the liver include elevation of liver-related transaminases, higher cholestasis enzymes, hyperglobulinemia, eosionophilia and higher C-reactive protein levels [10]. Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) is characterized by hepatic venous outflow tract obstruction, regardless of the level or mechanism of obstruction [11]. Cardinal features of BCS include fever, abdominal pain, high gradients ascites, peripheral edema, variceal bleeding, and hepatic encephalopathy [12]. Parasitic and nonparasitic cysts and abscesses may cause compression and thrombosis of the hepatic venous tree. Recent studies have reported a significant but rare association between BCS and alveolar echinococcosis [13-15]. It rarely develops due to compression or invasion of the hepatic veins by the parasitic mass as was seen in the presented case. BCS should be suspected if a patient with a large mass in the liver presents tender hepatomegaly with ascites or fever as was seen in our case. BCS is characterized by high gradient ascites (serum ascites-albumin gradient higher than 1.1) with higher total protein level (higher than 2.5 mg/dl) [5] as was observed in our case. As a striking finding, we also observed an eosinophilic ascites which was compatible with alveolar echinococcosis. Radiologic techniques remain the gold standard for diagnosis of alveolar echinococcosis of the liver as well as hepatic venous tree. It is reported that ultrasonography should be the first imaging step in the evaluation of the alveolar echinococcosis suspected patient. CT is used as complementary test to ultrasonography. Ultrasonographic findings of BCS are reported to be lack of visualization of hepatic veins, caudate lobe hypertrophy and ascites. CT of abdomen usually shows heterogeneous (patchy) hepatic parenchymal pattern, an enlarged caudate lobe and thrombi in hepatic vein [3]. In the presented case, all of the radiologic findings were compatible with BCS. Laboratory diagnosis of alveolar echinococcosis is usually made on the basis of serologic tests such as ELISA [16]. Furthermore, on the basis of the radiographic findings, we suspected the diagnosis of echinococcal disease, and a serologic test for echinococcal infection was found as positive. The liver resection and transplantation are the only ways of treatments that offer the potential for cure, even though only a small minority of cases will actually be cured. Resection should be performed in all patients when eligible. Morbidity is mainly related to variceal bleeding or hepatic failure [17].
The PNM classification for alveolar
echinococcosis is recently accepted as an effective method of selecting
patients with early-stage alveolar echinococcosis for curative liver
resection [18]. According to this classification (Table
1) our patient was in the surgically incurable stage. So we did
not perform a surgical approach for the presented case. A long term
medical therapy with albendazole can provide palliation in patients with
unresectable cysts [19]. In the case under discussion, we started a
treatment with albendazole (15 mg/kg in divided doses).
The patient’s blood ammonia level was higher than normal and flapping tremor was evident. Therefore, we preferred rifaximin (1200 mg/day, divided into 2 doses) for initial therapy of HE. In summary, we experienced a rare case of HE with BCS due to alveolar echinococcosis. Clinicians should remain vigilant in case of HE especially in rural areas hyperendemic for alveolar echinococcosis. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| References | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1. |
McManus
DP, Zhang W, Li J, Bartley PB. Echinococcosis. Lancet
2003;362(9392):1295-1304. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 2. |
Eckert J,
Deplazes P. Alveolar echinococcosis in humans: the current situation in
Central Europe and the need for countermeasures. Parasitol Today
1999;15(8):315-319. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 3. |
Czermak
BV, Unsinn KM, Gotwald T, Waldenberger P, Freund MC, Bale RJ, Vogel W,
et al. Echinococcus multilocularis revisited. AJR Am J Roentgenol
2001;176(5):1207-1212. [Medline] |
| 4. | Valla D. Hepatic venous outflow tract obstruction etiopathogenesis: Asia versus the West. J Gastroenterol Hepatol 2004;19:S204-S211. |
| 5. |
DeLeve LD, Valla DC,
Garcia-Tsao G. Vascular disorders of the liver. Hepatology
2009;49(5):1729-1764. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 6. |
Mas A.
Hepatic encephalopathy: from pathophysiology to treatment. Digestion
2006;73 Suppl 1:86-93. [Medline] |
| 7. |
Craig PS,
McManus DP, Lightowlers MW, Chabalgoity JA, Garcia HH, Gavidia CM,
Gilman RH, et al. Prevention and control of cystic echinococcosis.
Lancet Infect Dis 2007;7(6):385-394. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 8. |
Kern P,
Wen H, Sato N, Vuitton DA, Gruener B, Shao Y, Delabrousse E, et al. WHO
classification of alveolar echinococcosis: principles and application.
Parasitol Int 2006;55 Suppl:S283-287. [Medline] |
| 9. |
Tennert
U, Schubert S, Troltzsch M, Ivanova Tchavdarova L, Mossner J,
Schoppmeyer K. Pitfall alveolar echinococcosis in non-endemic areas.
Alveolar echinococcosis migrating northward. Ann Hepatol
2010;9(1):99-103. [Medline] |
| 10. |
Ammann RW, Eckert J.
Cestodes. Echinococcus. Gastroenterol Clin North Am 1996;25(3):655-689.
[Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 11. |
Janssen
HL, Garcia-Pagan JC, Elias E, Mentha G, Hadengue A, Valla DC. Budd-Chiari
syndrome: a review by an expert panel. J Hepatol 2003;38(3):364-371. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 12. |
Okuda H,
Yamagata H, Obata H, Iwata H, Sasaki R, Imai F, Okudaira M, et al.
Epidemiological and clinical features of Budd-Chiari syndrome in Japan.
J Hepatol 1995;22(1):1-9. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 13. |
Mehrotra
G, Singh RP, Krishna A, Singh BK. Pyogenic liver abscess causing acute
Budd-Chiari syndrome. Ann Trop Paediatr 1992;12(4):451-453. [Medline] |
| 14. |
Robotti
GC, Meister F, Schroder R. [Budd-Chiari syndrome in liver echinococcosis].
Rofo 1985;142(5):511-513. [Medline] |
| 15. |
Bedioui H, Nouira K,
Ayadi S, Daghfous A, Bakhtri M, Ksantini R, Chebbi F, et al. Budd-Chiari
syndrome secondary to hepatic echinococcosis. Gastroenterol Clin Biol
2007;31(8-9 Pt 1):721-724. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 16. |
Biava MF, Dao A, Fortier
B. Laboratory diagnosis of cystic hydatic disease. World J Surg
2001;25(1):10-14. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 17. |
Bresson-Hadni S, Vuitton
DA, Bartholomot B, Heyd B, Godart D, Meyer JP, Hrusovsky S, et al. A
twenty-year history of alveolar echinococcosis: analysis of a series of
117 patients from eastern France. Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol
2000;12(3):327-336. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 18. | Pawlowski ZS, Eckert J, Vuitton DA, Ammann RW, Kern P, Craig PS, Dar KF, et al. Echinococcosis in humans: clinical aspects, diagnosis and treatment. In: Eckert J, Gemmell M, Meslin F-X, Pawlowski Z, eds. WHOI/OIE manual on echinococcosis in humans and animals: a public health problem of global concern. Paris: World Organisation for Animal Health, 2001;20-71. |
| 19. |
Wilson JF,
Rausch RL, McMahon BJ, Schantz PM. Parasiticidal effect of chemotherapy
in alveolar hydatid disease: review of experience with mebendazole and
albendazole in Alaskan Eskimos. Clin Infect Dis 1992;15(2):234-249. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 20. | Bass NM. Emerging therapies for the management of hepatic encephalopathy. Semin Liver Dis 2007;27(suppl 2):18-25. |
| 21. |
Paik YH,
Lee KS, Han KH, Song KH, Kim MH, Moon BS, Ahn SH, et al. Comparison of
rifaximin and lactulose for the treatment of hepatic encephalopathy: a
prospective randomized study. Yonsei Med J 2005;46(3):399-407. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI):10.4021/gr306e
About
DOI and
CrossRef
Gastroenterology Research is a member of CrossRef.




