- Cytoplasmic enzymes present in tissues throughout the body.
- Oxidoreductase, enzyme of the anaerobic metabolic pathway.
- Heart, muscle, kidney, lung, and RBC’s have the highest concentration.
- Upon tissue damage, the cells release LDH in the bloodstream.
- Drugs that can increase LDH include alcohol, aspirin, fluorides, narcotics, anesthetics, clofibrate, mithramycin, and procainamide.
- Cancer cells employ LDH to increase their aerobic metabolism (glycolysis, ATP production, & lactate production): Warburg effect.
- CSF LDH increases in bacterial meningitis (normal in viral meningitis).
- Cancer cells undergo LDH mediated energy production to fulfill the demand for fast cellular growth (marker of metastases, prognosis, survival rates., and radiosensitivity).
- LDH serves as a general indicator of acute and chronic diseases.
- LDH helps in distinguishing exudate from transudate effusions.
- Isozymes, named LDH-1 through LDH-5, have differential expression in different tissues.
Lactate Dehydrogenase.
Bile acids
Role of Bile acids
- Bile acids play a key role in the absorption of lipids in the small intestine.
- Contribute to cholesterol metabolism by promoting the excretion of cholesterol.
- Denature dietary proteins, thereby accelerating their breakdown by pancreatic proteases.
- Direct and indirect antimicrobial effects. In this capacity, recent evidence suggests bile acids are mediators of high-fat diet-induced changes in the gut microbiota.
- Act as signaling molecules outside of the gastrointestinal tract.
The
primary bile acids—cholic acid and cheno-deoxycholic acid—are synthesized from
cholesterol in the liver.
The
maximal rate of bile acid synthesis is on the order of 4 to 6 g/day.
Horseshoe Kidney
The
isthmus connecting the two renal masses may be positioned in the midline or
laterally resulting in an asymmetric horseshoe kidney, 70% of which are left
dominant.
The
isthmus consists of renal parenchyma in about 80% of cases with the remainder
being composed of a fibrous band.
In
more than 90% of cases, fusion occurs at the lower pole, although fusion may
occur at the upper pole in a small minority of cases.
Higher incidence of UPJ obstructions, nephrolithiasis, and reflux compared to the general population. Increased frequency of some common renal cancers including transitional cell tumors (three to four times more common), Wilms tumor (twice as frequently), and an extremely large increase in very rare tumors such as carcinoid (62 to 82 times).
Polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD)
Multisystem
& progressive disease with cysts formation
Kidney
enlargement with other organ involvement (liver∼ 80%, pancreas
7-36%, spleen)
Intracranial
aneurysms in ∼6% of pts without family history & ∼20%
with a family history (rupture in 65-75%, usually before age 50)
Cardiac
Valve abnormalities in 25-30%
Urinary Bladder and Micturition
- First sensation of bladder filling at 100–150ml in an adult.
- Feeling of need to pee at 200 - 350 ml of urine
- Can comfortably hold between 300 - 450 ml
- Wall pressure of 5 - 15 mm Hg creates a sensation of bladder fullness while 30 mm Hg & beyond is painful.
- Most people pee 6 or 7 times/ 24 hours (4 -10 times daily is healthy).
- Normal 24-hour Urine output is 800 - 2000 ml/day (at normal fluid intake of about 2 liters/day).
Calot’s Triangle (CT)
Calot's triangle is a small (potential) triangular space at the porta hepatis of surgical importance as it is dissected during cholecystectomy. Its contents, the cystic artery and cystic duct must be identified before ligation and division to avoid intraoperative injury.
Borders
- Medial – common hepatic duct.
- Inferior – cystic duct.
- Superior – inferior surface of the liver.
The above differ from the original description of
Calot’s triangle in 1891 – where the cystic artery is given as the superior
border of the triangle. The modern definition gives a more consistent border
(the cystic artery has considerable variation in its anatomical course and
origin).
Contents
- Right hepatic artery
- Cystic artery
- Cystic lymph node (of Lund)
- Connective tissue
- Lymphatics
- Occasionally accessory hepatic ducts and arteries
Significance
- Cystic artery arises from Right Hepatic Artery in the Calot's triangle in 75%
- Cystic artery origin & course vary in 25% of
population.
ACTH stimulation test
Supra-physiological dose stimulates the pituitary & releases cortisol from the adrenal cortex, as long as the adrenal cortex has a functional reserve.
Factors
affecting ACTH stim test interpretation:
- Falsely negative or normal in mild disease or disease of recent onset.
- Most common- false-positive test is seen in recent use of corticosteroids
- Exogenous steroids lead to both baselines &adrenal responsiveness to cosyntropin.
- Propofol impairs adrenal steroidogenesis
- Midazolam, morphine, and fentanyl blunt the HPA axis, thereby interfering with corticosteroid metabolism.
- Metyrapone, etomidate, ketoconazole, megesterol, & mitotate interfere with cosyntropin function.
- Rifampin & phenytoin may increase cortisol metabolism.
In females, response to ACTH may be affected OCs which increase CBG levels.
- Salivary cortisol response can be useful as their measurement is a surrogate for serum free cortisol & are not affected by OCs
- Opioid receptors are present in the pituitary gland & hypothalamus, & opioids may impact HPA function.
- Nenke et al studied 17 pts treated with long-term opioids. Five of the 17 (29%) were found to have evidence of AI, with cortisol levels of <5 μg/dL.
Diabetes and hemoglobin A1c
Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis
The
etiology remains unknown. However, most of the cases result from chronic
urinary obstruction and infection. The organisms most commonly associated with
XGP are Escherichia coli, Proteus mirabilis, Pseudomonas, Enterococcus
faecalis, and Klebsiella, etc. Urinary obstruction occurs as a result of
calculus, most commonly, staghorn calculus (in almost 80% of patients), which
serves as a nidus for infection resulting in the destruction of the renal
parenchyma.
Sister Mary Joseph’s Nodule
The prognosis of patients presenting with Sister Mary
Joseph’s nodule is generally poor as it is a sign of advanced malignancy.
Management of the disease should consider patient preference, the clinical
state of the patient, and the etiology of the primary malignancy.
Porcelain gallbladder (PGB)
Term porcelain gallbladder (PGB) is often used to describe calcification of the gallbladder wall. When infiltrated by extensive calcium deposits, the gallbladder wall can become fragile, brittle and bluish in appearance, resulting in a ‘porcelain’ appearance.
The true incidence of porcelain gallbladder is unknown, but it is reported to be 0.6-0.8%, with a male-to-female ratio of 1:5. Most porcelain gallbladders (90-95%) are associated with gallstone. Mean age at diagnosis is 32 to 70 years.
Patients with porcelain gallbladder are usually asymptomatic, and the condition is usually found incidentally on plain abdominal radiographs, sonograms, or CT images.
Based on early studies which revealed a high association between porcelain gallbladder and gallbladder adenocarcinoma (22-30% of porcelain gallbladders developing gallbladder adenocarcinoma), cholecystectomy has been routinely performed when a porcelain gallbladder is identified.
More
recent studies have cast some doubt on the association, and the risk of
gallbladder cancer associated with calcification of the wall may be as low as
5-7%. There is no accepted follow-up interval, but the annual incidence of
developing gallbladder cancer is likely to be <1% per year.
Dupuytren’s contracture
Dupuytren’s contracture is predominantly a myo-fibroblastic disease that affects the palmar and digital fascia of the hand and results in contracture deformities. The most commonly affected digits are the fourth and fifth digits. It is a genetic disorder that often is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, but is most frequently seen with a multifactorial etiology. There are a number of factors that are believed to contribute to the development or worsening of this disease.
These
include:
- Men are more likely to develop the condition than women.
- People of northern European (English, Irish, Scottish, French, and Dutch) and Scandinavian (Swedish, Norwegian, and Finnish) ancestry are more likely to develop the condition.
- Dupuytren's often runs in families.
- Drinking alcohol may be associated with Dupuytren's.
- Diabetes, HIV, Vascular disease, smoking and seizure disorders are more likely to have Dupuytren's.
- Incidence
of the condition increases with age.