Budd - Chiari (Hepatic Venous
Budd - Chiari (Hepatic Venous
Budd - Chiari (Hepatic Venous
( Hepatic
Venous
Obstruction)
syndrome By: Dr. Ramy El-Barody
Resident Dr. of Tropical medicine and Gastroenterology, Qena University Hospital
An Overview
• It’s associated with the names of Budd and Chiari
although Budd ’ s description omitted the features,
and Chiari ’ s paper was not the first to report the
clinical picture.
• Budd–Chiari syndrome (BCS) results from
obstruction to hepatic venous outflow and may be
caused by either thrombotic or nonthrombotic
occlusion.
• It occurs in 1/100 000 of the general population.
• A similar syndrome may be produced by
constrictive pericarditis or right heart failure.
• The syndrome comprises :
- Hepatomegaly
- Abdominal pain
- Ascites
• Hepatic Histology shows zone 3 sinusoidal
distension and pooling.
CLASSIFICATION
A. The duration of symptoms and signs of
liver disease
• Acute
• Subacute
• Chronic
B. The site of obstruction
• Small hepatic veins, excluding terminal
venules
• Large hepatic veins
• Hepatic inferior vena cava(IVC)
C. The cause of obstruction
• Membranous web
• Direct infiltration by tumor or metastasis along
veins
• Thrombosis
Etiology and Pathogenesis
• Most patients with BCS present within 3 months of the onset of
symptoms.
• Subacute or chronic disease mostly at the time of presentation,
a finding suggesting that thrombosis of intrahepatic veins leads
subsequently to occlusion of large collecting veins.
• Membranous occlusion of the hepatic veins (MOHV) is a
common cause of BCS in Asia.
The pathogenesis is controversy; many have assumed that
webs are congenital, but the onset of symptoms in the fourth
decade of life and the pathologic features are more suggestive
of a post-thrombotic event.
• Most patients with BCS have an underlying Thrombotic
diathesis.In less than 20% of cases the disorder is Idiopathic
Disorders associated with BCS include the following:
1. Hematologic disorders
• Myeloproliferative disorders particularly Polycythemia Rubra Vera in up to 50%
od cases, often young females, multiple thrombotic conditions may be found
• Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) in up to 35% of cases may be
associated with BCS, with varying severity
• Systemic Lupus, e’ circulating lupus anticoagulants sometimes with DIC
• Antiphospholipid syndrome either 1ry or 2ry to SLE
• Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
• Idiopathic granulomatous venulitis
2. Inherited thrombotic diathesis
• Factor V Leiden mutation
• Protein C deficiency
• Protein S deficiency (rare)
• Prothrombin gene mutation (G20210A)
• Antithrombin III deficiency (rare), whatever 1ry or 2ry to proteinuria
3. Pregnancy or high-dose estrogen (oral contraceptives )
4. Chronic infections of the liver
• Aspergillosis
• Amebic abscess
• Hydatid cysts
• Tuberculosis
• Severe polycystic Liver disease, may mechanically compress hepatic veins
5. Tumors
• Hepatocellular carcinoma
• Adrenal or Renal cell carcinoma
• Angiosarcoma
6. Chronic inflammatory diseases
• Behçet’s disease, hepatic vein thrombosois usualy a sudden event, related to
extension of a caval thrombosis to the osteum of hepatic veins
• Inflammatory bowel disease
• Sarcoidosis
7. Central hepatic vein involvement in the alcoholic and in veno – occlusive disease
8. Myxoma of the right atrium and metastases to the right atrium
9. Liver transplantation may be followed by small hepatic vein stenosis with some of
the features of veno - occlusive disease.
Pathological changes
• The hepatic veins show occlusion at points
from the ostia to the smaller radicles.
• Thrombus may be purulent or may contain
malignant cells, depending on the cause.
• Involvement of large hepatic veins is usually
thrombotic. Isolated obstruction to the
inferior vena cava or small hepatic veins is
usually non – thrombotic.
• The Liver is
- Enlarged, purplish and smooth.
- Venous congestion is gross and the cut surface shows ‘
nutmeg ’ change.
- Hepatic veins proximal to the obstruction and, in the acute
stage, subcapsular lymphatics, are dilated and prominent.
• In chronic cases
- The vein wall is thickened and there may be some
recanalization. In others it’s replaced by a fibrous strand, a
fibrous web may be seen
- The caudate lobe is enlarged and compresses the IVC.
- The fibrosis and regenerative nodules continue to evolve
after the first hepatic vein thrombosis and often progress to
involve the portal venous system.
Vertical section of the liver at
autopsy in hepatic
venous obstruction. The pale
areas represent regeneration
and the dark areas are
congested. Note the marked
hypertrophy of the caudate
lobe (C).
Histology shows:
• Zone 3 venous dilatation with hemorrhage and
necrosis
• Persisting hepatic venous obstruction results in
venocentric cirrhosis, so - called reverse
lobulation. Portal vein involvement leads to
venoportal cirrhosis and mixed forms exist.
• Large regenerative nodules are usual and are
related to a new arterial supply
• Nodular regenerative hyperplasia is frequent
with long standing arterialization
Longitudinal section of hepatic venules showing fibrosis in
the lumen, thickening of the wall and surrounding loss of
hepatocytes. (Chromophobe aniline blue.)
Clinical features
• These depend on the speed of occlusion, severity of liver
dysfunction, anatomical sites of thrombosis and etiology.
• The picture varies from a fulminant course, to a
presentation as chronic hepatocellular disease.
• The classic triad of hepatomegaly, ascites, and
abdominal pain is seen in most patients but is
nonspecific.
o Splenomegaly may develop in almost half of patients.
o Peripheral edema suggests the possibility of thrombosis
or compression of the IVC.
o Jaundice is rare.
• In the most Acute form (often suffering from
some other condition):
- Abdominal pain, vomiting, liver
enlargement, ascites and mild icterus.
Watery diarrhoea, following MVO, is a
terminal, inconstant feature.
- If the hepatic venous occlusion is total,
delirium and coma with hepatocellular failure
and death occurs within a few days.
• In the more usual Chronic form:
- Pain over an enlarged tender liver, ascites,
Jaundice is mild or absent. Pressure over the
liver may fail to fill the jugular vein (negative
hepatojugular reflux )
- As portal hypertension increases, the spleen
becomes palpable.
-The enlarged caudate lobe, palpable in the
epigastrium, may simulate a tumour
• Asymptomatic patients, who account for up to
15% of cases may be discovered incidentally.
• If the inferior vena cava is blocked, oedema of
the legs is gross and veins distend over the
abdomen, flanks and back. Albuminuria is
found.
• The condition may develop over months as
ascites and wasting.
DIAGNOSIS
Routine biochemical and hematologic parameters