Cirrhosis 

 Definition

Cirrhosis is a diffuse, progressive, and irreversible liver disease characterized by:

  • 🔹 Bridging fibrosis
  • 🔹 Regenerative nodules
  • 🔹 Distortion of normal hepatic architecture
  • 🔹 Development of portal hypertension and hepatic insufficiency

It represents the end stage of chronic liver injury, regardless of etiology.


 Normal Liver vs Cirrhotic Liver

Normal Liver

  • Smooth surface
  • Uniform parenchyma
  • Intact lobular architecture

Cirrhotic Liver

  • Irregular, nodular surface
  • Fibrous septa
  • Regenerative nodules
  • Distorted vascular channels


 Etiology of Cirrhosis

1️⃣ Alcohol-Related Liver Disease

  • Chronic ethanol toxicity
  • Most common in many regions
  • Associated with:
    • Steatosis alcoholic hepatitis cirrhosis

2️⃣ Chronic Viral Hepatitis

  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis C

3️⃣ Metabolic & Genetic

  • Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD/NASH)
  • Wilson disease
  • Hemochromatosis
  • Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency

4️⃣ Autoimmune

  • Autoimmune hepatitis
  • Primary biliary cholangitis
  • Primary sclerosing cholangitis

5️⃣ Vascular Causes

  • Budd–Chiari syndrome
  • Chronic right heart failure

6️⃣ Drugs & Toxins

  • Methotrexate
  • Amiodarone
  • Aflatoxins


 Pathophysiology — Step-by-Step

1️⃣ Chronic Injury

Persistent inflammation hepatocyte necrosis.

2️⃣ Stellate Cell Activation

  • Hepatic stellate cells (Ito cells)
  • Transform into myofibroblasts
  • Produce collagen types I & III

3️⃣ Fibrosis

  • Portal–portal and portal–central bridging fibrosis
  • Sinusoidal capillarization

4️⃣ Architectural Distortion

  • Regenerative nodules form
  • Intrahepatic resistance increases

5️⃣ Portal Hypertension Develops

Due to:

  • Increased intrahepatic resistance
  • Splanchnic vasodilation
  • Hyperdynamic circulation


 Portal Hypertension — Core Concept

Portal pressure = Flow × Resistance

Cirrhosis increases:

  • 🔺 Resistance (fibrosis, nodules)
  • 🔺 Flow (NO-mediated vasodilation)

Consequences

  • Varices
  • Ascites
  • Splenomegaly
  • Hepatorenal syndrome
  • Portosystemic shunts


 Compensated vs Decompensated Cirrhosis

Feature

Compensated

Decompensated

Symptoms

Often none

Present

Ascites

No

Yes

Variceal bleed

No

Yes

Encephalopathy

No

Yes

Jaundice

Mild/absent

Prominent

1-year survival

>90%

~60%

Transition to decompensation dramatically worsens prognosis.

Causes of Decompensated Cirrhosis

Decompensation occurs when portal hypertension or hepatic insufficiency crosses a threshold.

Common Triggers

Category

Examples

Infection

SBP, UTI, pneumonia

GI bleed

Variceal bleed

Alcohol

Binge drinking

Medication

NSAIDs, sedatives

Electrolyte imbalance

Hyponatremia

Non-adherence

Stopping diuretics


 ACLF vs Decompensated Cirrhosis

Cirrhosis is not a static disease. Once a patient develops ascites, variceal bleed, or encephalopathy, they enter decompensated cirrhosis.

However, a subset of these patients deteriorate rapidly, develop organ failures, and have very high short-term mortality — this is Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure (ACLF).


 1️⃣ Definitions

🔹 Decompensated Cirrhosis

Cirrhosis with one or more of:

  • Ascites
  • Variceal bleeding
  • Hepatic encephalopathy
  • Jaundice

Progression is usually gradual.


 Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure (ACLF)

Two major definitions exist:

 EASL-CLIF Definition

From the European Association for the Study of the Liver

Acute decompensation of cirrhosis associated with organ failure(s) and high 28-day mortality

Organ failures are defined by the CLIF-SOFA score.


 APASL Definition

From the Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver

Acute hepatic insult manifesting as jaundice (bilirubin ≥5 mg/dL) and coagulopathy (INR ≥1.5), complicated within 4 weeks by ascites and/or encephalopathy.

 APASL focuses more on acute hepatic insult, while EASL emphasizes multi-organ failure.


 Clinical Features

Early (Compensated)

  • Fatigue
  • Anorexia
  • Weight loss


Late (Decompensated)

1️⃣ Portal Hypertension Signs

  • Ascites
  • Caput medusae
  • Splenomegaly
  • Variceal bleed

2️⃣ Hepatic Failure Signs

  • Jaundice
  • Encephalopathy
  • Coagulopathy
  • Hypoalbuminemia

3️⃣ Stigmata of Chronic Liver Disease

  • Spider angiomas
  • Palmar erythema
  • Gynecomastia
  • Testicular atrophy
  • Dupuytren contracture


 Laboratory Findings

Parameter

Change

Bilirubin

AST/ALT

Mild

INR

Albumin

Platelets

(hypersplenism)

Sodium

(advanced disease)


 Imaging

Ultrasound

  • Nodular liver
  • Coarse echotexture
  • Splenomegaly
  • Ascites

CT / MRI

  • Irregular liver margin
  • Caudate lobe hypertrophy
  • Portosystemic collaterals


🧮 Severity Scoring

1️⃣ Child–Pugh Score

Parameter

Points

Bilirubin

1–3

Albumin

1–3

INR

1–3

Ascites

1–3

Encephalopathy

1–3

Class A, B, C


2️⃣ MELD Score

  • Based on bilirubin, INR, creatinine
  • Used for transplant allocation


 Major Complications

1️⃣ Variceal Hemorrhage

  • Due to portal hypertension
  • Life-threatening

2️⃣ Ascites

  • Most common complication
  • Due to RAAS activation + hypoalbuminemia

3️⃣ Hepatic Encephalopathy

  • Ammonia accumulation
  • Astrocyte swelling

4️⃣ Hepatorenal Syndrome

  • Functional renal failure
  • Intense renal vasoconstriction

5️⃣ Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis (SBP)

6️⃣ Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC)


 Management — Etiology + Complication Based

 Step 1: Confirm “Compensated” Status

Compensated =

  • No ascites
  • No variceal bleed
  • No encephalopathy
  • No jaundice

Normal daily functioning.


 Step 2: Treat the Underlying Etiology (Most Important)

Cirrhosis progression depends heavily on cause control.

 Viral Hepatitis

  • Hepatitis B Tenofovir / Entecavir
  • Hepatitis C Direct-acting antivirals

👉 Viral suppression reduces decompensation and HCC risk.


 Alcohol-Related

  • Strict alcohol abstinence
  • Addiction counseling
  • Nutritional optimization

Even advanced fibrosis may partially regress with abstinence.


 Metabolic (NASH)

  • Weight reduction (7–10%)
  • Diabetes control
  • Lipid control

Related to Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.


 Autoimmune

  • Autoimmune hepatitis Steroids ± Azathioprine


 Iron / Copper Disorders

  • Hemochromatosis Phlebotomy
  • Wilson disease Chelation


 Step 3: Prevent First Decompensation

1️⃣ Screen for Varices

All compensated cirrhosis patients need baseline endoscopy.

If varices present:

  • Non-selective beta blockers (NSBB)
    • Propranolol
    • Carvedilol

If no varices:

  • Repeat every 2–3 years


2️⃣ Vaccination

Mandatory:

  • Hepatitis A
  • Hepatitis B
  • Influenza
  • Pneumococcal vaccine


3️⃣ Avoid Hepatotoxic Drugs

Avoid:

  • NSAIDs
  • Unnecessary sedatives
  • High-dose acetaminophen (>2 g/day)


4️⃣ Nutritional Advice

  • Protein: 1.2–1.5 g/kg/day
  • Avoid prolonged fasting
  • Late evening snack (reduces sarcopenia)

Malnutrition accelerates decompensation.


 Step 4: HCC Surveillance (Critical)

All cirrhotics require screening for hepatocellular carcinoma.

Every 6 Months:

  • Ultrasound abdomen
  • ± AFP

Because cirrhosis is the strongest risk factor for HCC.


 Step 5: Monitoring

Every 3–6 months:

  • LFT
  • INR
  • Albumin
  • Creatinine
  • Sodium
  • Platelets

Calculate:

  • MELD score periodically


 Clinically Significant Portal Hypertension (CSPH)

If HVPG ≥10 mmHg high risk of decompensation.

Carvedilol may reduce portal pressure.


📈 Prognosis

Compensated cirrhosis:

  • Median survival >12 years
  • Annual decompensation risk: 5–7%

Once decompensation occurs mortality rises sharply.