Liver fibrosis
Synopsis

Liver fibrosis can progress to cirrhosis. Cirrhosis can present with ascites, gastrointestinal bleeding (portal gastropathy or varices), jaundice, fatigue, or infections due to an impaired immune system.
Fibrosis refers to histologic findings and is therefore diagnosed on liver biopsy. However, surrogate markers exist (eg, FibroSure / FibroTest, an indirect serum marker panel [6 blood serum tests]) that generate a score correlated with the degree of liver fibrosis in the absence of a liver biopsy.
Fibrosis is typically progressive over months to years. It is important to identify the underlying etiology of chronic liver injury to reverse or slow the progression of fibrosis toward cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease.
Codes
K74.00 – Hepatic fibrosis, unspecified
SNOMEDCT:
62484002 – Hepatic fibrosis
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Last Updated:06/06/2017