A amoebic liver abscess is a type of liver abscess caused by amebiasis.[1] It is the involvement of liver tissue by trophozoites of the organism Entamoeba histolytica and of its abscess due to necrosis.
Amoebic hepatic abscess | |
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Gross pathology of liver containing amoebic abscess | |
Specialty | Infectious diseases |
Presentation
editApproximately 90% of patients with E histolytica are asymptomatic.[2] The two most common manifestations of E histolytica include colitis (bloody stool with mucus, abdominal pain, and/or diarrhea), and discovery of a liver abscess on imaging.[2] Liver abscesses commonly present as right upper quadrant abdominal pain and fever, with worsening features associated with abscess rupture.[2]
Symptoms
edit- Pain right hypochondrium referred to the right shoulder
- Pyrexia (100.4 F)
- Profuse sweating and rigors
- Loss of weight
- Earthy complexion
Signs
edit- Pallor
- Tenderness and rigidity in right hypochondrium
- Palpable liver
- Intercostal tenderness
- Basal lung signs
Diagnosis
editDiagnosis is primarily made by identifying stool ova and parasites on stool antigen testing in the presence of colitis, or E histolytica serology.[2]
- Blood ceruloplasmin
- Haemoglobin estimation
- Stools examination (trophozoites and cysts)
- Radiography
- Aspiration exploratory
- Medical ultrasonography and CT scanning
- Sigmoidoscopy
- Liver function tests
- Serological tests
Treatment
editAlthough medical management using long courses of antibiotics have proven to be successful, Drainage of the abscess is the mainstay treatment. [3]
Research
editDue to the difficulty of exploring host and amebic factors involved in the pathogenesis of amebic liver abscess in humans, most studies have been conducted with animal models (e.g., mice, gerbils, and hamsters). Histopathological findings revealed that the chronic phase of amebic liver abscess in humans corresponds to lytic or liquefactive necrosis, whereas in rodent models there is granulomatous inflammation. However, the use of animal models has provided important information on molecules and mechanisms of the host/parasite interaction in amebic liver abscess.[4]
References
edit- ^ Nespola, Benoît; Betz, Valérie; Brunet, Julie; Gagnard, Jean-Charles; Krummel, Yves; Hansmann, Yves; Hannedouche, Thierry; Christmann, Daniel; Pfaff, Alexander W.; Filisetti, Denis; Pesson, Bernard; Abou-Bacar, Ahmed; Candolfi, Ermanno (2015). "First case of amebic liver abscess 22 years after the first occurrence". Parasite. 22: 20. doi:10.1051/parasite/2015020. PMC 4472968. PMID 26088504.
- ^ a b c d Wuerz, Terry; Kane, Jennifer B; Boggild, Andrea K; Krajden, Sigmund; Keystone, Jay S; Fuksa, Milan; Kain, Kevin C; Warren, Ralph; Kempston, John; Anderson, Joe (2012). "A Review of Amoebic Liver Abscess for Clinicians in a Nonendemic Setting". Canadian Journal of Gastroenterology. 26 (10): 729–733. doi:10.1155/2012/852835. PMC 3472914. PMID 23061067.
- ^ Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (20 ed.). Mc Graw Hill. 22 October 2019. p. 402. ISBN 978-1-26-045535-9.
- ^ a b Campos-Rodríguez, Rafael; Gutiérrez-Meza, Manuel; Jarillo-Luna, Rosa Adriana; Drago-Serrano, María Elisa; Abarca-Rojano, Edgar; Ventura-Juárez, Javier; Cárdenas-Jaramillo, Luz María; Pacheco-Yepez, Judith (2016). "A review of the proposed role of neutrophils in rodent amebic liver abscess models". Parasite. 23: 6. doi:10.1051/parasite/2016006. PMC 4754534. PMID 26880421.