hepatomegaly
see also:
hepatosplenomegaly
splenomegaly
lymphadenopathy
liver diseases
introduction
patients with hepatomegaly or splenomegaly should be advised to avoid all contact sports as there is a risk of fatal organ rupture
rupture risk is higher in older patients as the capsule thins with age
aetiology
inflammatory response to infection or auto-immune conditions:
EBV / glandular fever / infectious mononucleosis
hepatitis
cirrhosis
rubella
systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
fasciolosis
leishmaniasis
schistosomiasis
or
filariasis
leptospirosis
Actinomycosis
hypertrophy due to increased work of RBC destruction:
thallasaemia major
malaria
hemoglobin SC disease
NB. sickle cell disease results in a small, infarcted spleen rather than splenomegaly
venous congestion:
RVF/CCF
Budd–Chiari syndrome (hepatic vein thrombosis or compression)
acute syndrome presents with rapidly progressive severe upper abdominal pain, jaundice, hepatomegaly (enlarged liver), ascites, elevated liver enzymes
most have a painless more chronic form
aetiology:
polycythemia vera
pregnancy or puerperium
combined oral contraceptive pill (OCP)
paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
hepatocellular carcinoma
infection such as
tuberculosis (TB)
IVC stenosis
thrombophilia
drugs/toxins:
ethanol (alcohol and alcohol withdrawal)
congenital:
haemolytic anaemia
Riedel's lobe is an extended, tongue-like, right lobe of the liver
polycystic disease
Cori's disease
Zellweger syndrome
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I deficiency
myeloproliferative:
eg. chronic myeloid metaplasia
infiltrative / metabolic:
steatohepatitis (fatty liver)
sarcoidosis
amyloidosis
haemochromatosis
Gaucher's disease
Niemann Pick disease
Hurler's syndrome
Von Gierke disease (Glycogen Storage Disease type 1)
Glycogen Storage Disease types III, VI and IX
some
neoplasia / cancer / tumours
neoplastic:
hepatocellular carcinoma
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
lymphoma
mm
metastases
miscellaneous:
traumatic haematoma
cysts
abscesses - pyogenic or ameobic