| Literature DB >> 25002869 |
Soumik Ghosh1, Sourabh Sharma1, A K Gadpayle1, H K Gupta1, R K Mahajan2, R Sahoo1, Naveen Kumar1.
Abstract
Objective. To describe the clinical profile, microbiological aetiologies, and management outcomes in patients with liver abscess. Methods. A cross-sectional study was conducted from May, 2011, to April, 2013, on 200 consecutive liver abscess patients at PGIMER and Dr. RML Hospital, New Delhi. History, examination, and laboratory investigations were recorded. Ultrasound guided aspiration was done and samples were investigated. Chi-square test and multivariate regression analysis were performed to test association. Results. The mean age of patients was 41.13 years. Majority of them were from lower socioeconomic class (67.5%) and alcoholic (72%). The abscesses were predominantly in right lobe (71%) and solitary (65%). Etiology of abscess was 69% amoebic, 18% pyogenic, 7.5% tubercular, 4% mixed, and 1.5% fungal. Percutaneous needle aspiration was done in 79%, pigtail drainage in 17%, and surgical intervention for rupture in 4% patients. Mortality was 2.5%, all reported in surgical group. Solitary abscesses were amoebic and tubercular whereas multiple abscesses were pyogenic (P = 0.001). Right lobe was predominantly involved in amoebic and pyogenic abscesses while in tubercular abscesses left lobe involvement was predominant (P = 0.001). Conclusions. The commonest presentation was young male, alcoholic of low socioeconomic class having right lobe solitary amoebic liver abscess. Appropriate use of minimally invasive drainage techniques reduces mortality.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25002869 PMCID: PMC4066852 DOI: 10.1155/2014/142382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trop Med ISSN: 1687-9686
Figure 1Flowchart depicting protocol followed for percutaneous ultrasound guided drainage of liver abscess and its appropriate processing [7, 8].
Clinical profile of patients: pain abdomen and fever were the two most common symptoms while hepatomegaly was the most frequent clinical finding.
| Parameters | Percentage (= | |
|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | Pain abdomen | 99% (198) |
| Fever | 94% (188) | |
| Anorexia | 93% (186) | |
| Nausea/vomiting | 54% (108) | |
| Diarrhea | 23% (46) | |
| Cough | 16% (32) | |
| Weight loss | 40% (80) | |
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| Risk Factors | Alcoholic | 72% (144) |
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| Signs | Pallor | 39% (78) |
| Jaundice | 26% (52) | |
| Hepatomegaly | 89% (178) | |
| Splenomegaly | 10% (20) | |
| Ascites | 9% (18) | |
| Pleural effusion | 30% (60) | |
Laboratory investigations: all parameters, particularly those related to liver were deranged in good percentage of patients. Sepsis indicators like raised TLC and low albumin were present in more than three-fourths of patients.
| Parameters | Mean ± SD | Out of range cut off | Out of range percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| ESR | 44 ± 28 mm 1st hr | >20 mm in 1st hour | 72% |
| Hb % | 11.2 ± 1.9 gm/dL | <11 gm/dL | 40.5% |
| TLC | 19,100 ± 9104/ | >11000/ | 82% |
| INR | 1.37 ± 0.25 | >1.2 | 75% |
| Bilirubin | 1.55 ± 2.18 mg/dL | >1.2 mg/dL | 27% |
| SGOT | 83 ± 137 IU/L | >50 IU/L | 47% |
| SGPT | 62 ± 67 IU/L | >50 IU/L | 42% |
| Alkaline phosphatase | 622 ± 446 IU/L | 300 IU/L | 79% |
| Albumin | 3.0 ± 0.56 g/dL | <3.5 g/dL | 82% |
| Urea | 40 ± 36.8 mg/dL | >45 mg/dL | 27% |
| Calcium | 8.21 ± 0.8 mg/dL | <8 mg/dL | 35% |
Ultrasonography abdomen findings for liver abscess: right lobe solitary abscess was the most common pattern. Segments 7 and 6 were the most common sites of abscess. Associated typhlitis, an uncommon finding with ALA, was present in only 6% patients.
| Parameters | Percentage (= | |
|---|---|---|
| Lobe | Right | 71% (142) |
| Left | 17.5% (35) | |
| Bilateral | 11.5% (23) | |
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| Number | Solitary | 65% (130) |
| Few (≤3) | 11% (22) | |
| Multiple (>3) | 23.5% (47) | |
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| Typhlitis | 6% (12) | |
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| Mean abscess vol. ± SD | 270 ± 205 cc | |
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| Segment involved | VII | 35% (70) |
| VI | 25% (50) | |
| VIII | 10% (20) | |
| V | 10% (20) | |
| IV | 10% (20) | |
| Rest | 10% (20) | |
Management outcome: majority of patients were managed by needle aspiration. Surgical intervention was done in 8 patients, all for rupture, out of which 5 died.
| Parameters | Percentage (= | |
|---|---|---|
| Abscess drainage | Percutaneous needle aspiration | 79% (158) |
| Pigtail drainage | 17% (34) | |
| Open surgical | 4% (8) | |
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| Change of antimicrobials required | 25% (50) | |
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| Mean duration of | Hospitalisation | 8 ± 5.36 days |
| Treatment | 33 ± 42 days | |
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| Surgical intervention | 4% (8) | |
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| Mortality | 2.5% (5) | |
Etiological analysis: amoebic serology was positive in 73% patients and, in accordance, aspirate was anchovy sauce in 71% of them. All cases of diagnosed tubercular abscess were AFB positive. In pyogenic liver abscess, Gram negative gut flora predominated etiologically.
| Parameter | Percentage ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Appearance | Anchovy sauce | 71% (142) |
| Purulent | 29% (58) | |
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| Amoebic serology positive | 73% (146) | |
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| AFB positivity on pus | 7.5% (15) | |
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| Fungal culture on pus |
| 1.5% (3) |
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| Positive cultures on pus | 22% (44) | |
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| Etiological agents in positive pus culture |
| 8.5% (17) |
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| 5.5% (11) | |
|
| 2% (4) | |
|
| 2% (4) | |
|
| 2% (4) | |
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| 1.5% (3) | |
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| 0.5% (1) | |
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| Blood culture positive | 1.5% (3) | |
Figure 2Tubercular liver abscess. (a) Ultrasonography image of a large hypoechoic lesion involving the right lobe of liver and (b) aspirated pus on ZN staining depicts acid fast bacilli.
Statistical analysis: results of statistical analysis of abscess size and duration of hospitalisation with various clinical and laboratory variables using multivariate analysis. Association of these variables with mortality was studied using Chi-square test, which has also been given (only data with significant associations has been given).
| Parameter | Correlation coefficient |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abscess volume | Anemia | −0.33 | 0.005 |
| Alkaline phosphatase | 0.37 | 0.041 | |
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| Duration of hospitalisation (morbidity indicators) | Duration of fever | 0.02 | |
| ESR | 0.16 | 0.021 | |
| INR | 0.20 | 0.043 | |
| Albumin | −0.28 | 0.033 | |
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| Mortality | Females | 0.001 | |
| Duration of fever | 0.001 | ||
| Icterus | 0.001 | ||
| Ascites | 0.006 | ||
| Pleural effusion | 0.028 | ||