Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease

Liver enzyme levels are commonly obtained in the evaluation of many conditions. Elevated alanine transaminase and aspartate transaminase have traditionally been considered a “hepatocellular” pattern concerning for ischemic, viral, or toxic hepatitis. Elevations in these levels pose a diagnostic dile...

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Main Authors: Eula Plana Tetangco MD, Natasha Shah MD, Hafiz Muhammad Sharjeel Arshad MD, Hareth Raddawi MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-05-01
Series:Journal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2324709616651092
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spelling doaj-e6a7942b3c7744b9a80aa4b02b11908a2020-11-25T03:16:40ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports2324-70962016-05-01410.1177/232470961665109210.1177_2324709616651092Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular DiseaseEula Plana Tetangco MD0Natasha Shah MD1Hafiz Muhammad Sharjeel Arshad MD2Hareth Raddawi MD3University of Illinois at Chicago, IL, USAUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, IL, USAUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, IL, USAAdvocate Christ Medical Center, Oak Lawn, IL, USALiver enzyme levels are commonly obtained in the evaluation of many conditions. Elevated alanine transaminase and aspartate transaminase have traditionally been considered a “hepatocellular” pattern concerning for ischemic, viral, or toxic hepatitis. Elevations in these levels pose a diagnostic dilemma in patients without a clinical picture consistent with liver disease. On the other hand, elevated alkaline phosphatase historically represents a “cholestatic” pattern concerning for gallbladder and biliary tract disease. Often, patients present with a “mixed” picture of elevation in all 3 liver enzymes, further confounding the clinical scenario. We present 4 cases of women with severe upper abdominal pain and markedly elevated transaminases. Three of the patients had accompanying jaundice. A higher rise in enzyme levels was seen in those who had greater bile duct dilation. All patients saw a rapid decrease in transaminases after biliary decompression, along with a fall in alkaline phosphatase and total bilirubin levels. No evidence of liver disease was found, nor were there any signs of hepatocellular disease on imaging. The patients were ultimately found to have choledocholithiasis on endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with no hepatocellular disease. Furthermore, our cases show that severe abdominal pain in the setting of elevated liver enzymes is likely associated with biliary disease rather than a primary hepatic process. Recognition of this rare pattern of markedly elevated transaminases in isolated biliary disease can aid in avoiding unnecessary evaluation of primary hepatic disease and invasive surgical interventions such as liver biopsy.https://doi.org/10.1177/2324709616651092
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eula Plana Tetangco MD
Natasha Shah MD
Hafiz Muhammad Sharjeel Arshad MD
Hareth Raddawi MD
spellingShingle Eula Plana Tetangco MD
Natasha Shah MD
Hafiz Muhammad Sharjeel Arshad MD
Hareth Raddawi MD
Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease
Journal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports
author_facet Eula Plana Tetangco MD
Natasha Shah MD
Hafiz Muhammad Sharjeel Arshad MD
Hareth Raddawi MD
author_sort Eula Plana Tetangco MD
title Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease
title_short Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease
title_full Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease
title_fullStr Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease
title_full_unstemmed Markedly Elevated Liver Enzymes in Choledocholithiasis in the absence of Hepatocellular Disease
title_sort markedly elevated liver enzymes in choledocholithiasis in the absence of hepatocellular disease
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports
issn 2324-7096
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Liver enzyme levels are commonly obtained in the evaluation of many conditions. Elevated alanine transaminase and aspartate transaminase have traditionally been considered a “hepatocellular” pattern concerning for ischemic, viral, or toxic hepatitis. Elevations in these levels pose a diagnostic dilemma in patients without a clinical picture consistent with liver disease. On the other hand, elevated alkaline phosphatase historically represents a “cholestatic” pattern concerning for gallbladder and biliary tract disease. Often, patients present with a “mixed” picture of elevation in all 3 liver enzymes, further confounding the clinical scenario. We present 4 cases of women with severe upper abdominal pain and markedly elevated transaminases. Three of the patients had accompanying jaundice. A higher rise in enzyme levels was seen in those who had greater bile duct dilation. All patients saw a rapid decrease in transaminases after biliary decompression, along with a fall in alkaline phosphatase and total bilirubin levels. No evidence of liver disease was found, nor were there any signs of hepatocellular disease on imaging. The patients were ultimately found to have choledocholithiasis on endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with no hepatocellular disease. Furthermore, our cases show that severe abdominal pain in the setting of elevated liver enzymes is likely associated with biliary disease rather than a primary hepatic process. Recognition of this rare pattern of markedly elevated transaminases in isolated biliary disease can aid in avoiding unnecessary evaluation of primary hepatic disease and invasive surgical interventions such as liver biopsy.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2324709616651092
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