Hepatomegaly
Peer reviewed by Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGP Last updated by Dr Laurence KnottLast updated 10 Mar 2022
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What is hepatomegaly?
Hepatomegaly is enlargement of the liver. The liver edge is normally palpable in children and thin adults and some patients may have a palpable right lobe of the liver. It is smooth, uniform, non-tender and descends to meet the palpating fingers on inspiration. The best way to assess liver size is by percussion - a normal-sized liver can appear enlarged if displaced downwards by lung disorders. An enlarged liver expands down and across towards the left iliac fossa (LIF). To avoid missing a really big liver, always begin liver palpation in the LIF and work towards the right upper quadrant1 .
The most common causes of hepatomegaly in the UK are alcoholic liver disease, malignancy (particularly metastases) and congestive cardiac failure.
Hepatomegaly symptoms
Associated hepatomegaly symptoms may be few or rather vague - eg, loss of appetite, weight loss and lethargy.
There may be hepatomegaly symptoms relating to liver dysfunction - eg, jaundice, bruising, gynaecomastia, spider naevi, ascites; or related to the underlying cause - eg, xanthelasma suggests autoimmune liver disease.
Measure the hepatomegaly by percussing the upper and lower borders (will rule out causes such as emphysema which can push the liver down giving a false impression of hepatomegaly).
On palpation
Smooth hepatomegaly
Suggests: hepatitis, chronic heart failure, sarcoid, early alcoholic cirrhosis, tricuspid incompetence with a pulsatile liver.
Craggy hepatomegaly
Suggests: primary hepatoma or secondary tumours.
NB: a small liver is typical in late cirrhosis and nodular cirrhosis typically produces a small shrunken liver not a large craggy one. Ask particularly about alcohol consumption, sexual activity, intravenous (IV) drug abuse, blood transfusions and recent travel.
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Hepatomegaly causes (aetiology)1 2 3
Infection Viral hepatitis (acute and chronic). Infectious mononucleosis - Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Cytomegalovirus (CMV). Malaria. Helminthic infection. Pyogenic abscess. Amoebic abscess. | Congestive Right ventricular failure. Congestive cardiac failure (CCF). Constrictive pericarditis. Budd-Chiari syndrome. |
Autoimmune Autoimmune liver disease. | Biliary disease Extrahepatic obstruction - eg, pancreatic cancer, cholangiocarcinoma. Primary biliary cirrhosis. Primary sclerosing cholangitis. |
Tumours and infiltrative diseases Secondaries (metastatic carcinoma). Primary hepatic tumour - eg, hepatocellular. Lymphoma. Granulomatous hepatitis. Amyloidosis. Sarcoidosis. | Haematological disorders Thalassaemia. Sickle cell disease. Haemolytic anaemia. Myeloma. Leukaemia. |
Metabolic Haemochromatosis. Wilson's disease. Glycogen storage diseases. Porphyria. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Diabetes mellitus-associated fatty liver. | Toxic/drug-related Alcoholic liver disease: acute alcoholic hepatitis and alcoholic fatty liver. Drug-induced hepatitis - eg, statins, macrolides, amiodarone, paracetamol (indicates significant damage). |
Hepatomegaly in neonates and children4 5
Infections: TORCH infections, hepatitis viruses and EBV and malaria.
Metabolic: galactosaemia, lipid storage disorders - eg, Gaucher's disease.
Neoplastic: leukaemia, lymphoma and hepatoblastoma.
Haematological: sickle cell anaemia and thalassaemia.
Cardiovascular: congestive cardiac failure and tricuspid regurgitation.
Miscellaneous: schistosomiasis, toxins, sepsis, polycystic kidneys and liver.
Drugs: for example, antituberculous medications.
Hepatomegaly
With normal bilirubin: consider hepatoblastoma, metabolic diseases.
With raised conjugated bilirubin:
With splenomegaly: TORCH (TOxoplasmosis, Rubella, CMV and Herpes simplex) infections, sepsis and disorders of carbohydrate metabolism - eg, galactosaemia.
Without splenomegaly: liver tumour, choledochal cyst, biliary atresia, neonatal hepatitis.
With raised unconjugated bilirubin: CCF, toxins, haemolytic anaemias.
What to do if a patient has hepatomegaly
If unwell, may need urgent admission.
Full history: include recent travel, tattoos, IV drug abuse, medications as well as herbal remedies, alcohol intake and sexual history.
Full examination: look for stigmata of chronic liver disease, delirium tremens, lymphadenopathy, and presence of splenomegaly; digital rectal examination may be necessary.
Investigations: if the patient does not need urgent admission then request some basic investigations - eg, LFTs, FBC and film, U&Es, clotting, inflammatory markers, hepatitis screen and liver ultrasound scan. Further tests can be decided according to the results of these tests.
Referral to a specialist: for further assessment, diagnosis and management.
Further reading and references
- Joshi D, Belgaumkar A, Ratnayake V, et al; A case of hepatomegaly. Postgrad Med J. 2007 Oct;83(984):e2. doi: 10.1136/pgmj.2007.062471.
- French's Index of Differential Diagnosis (15th Ed) 2011
- Kumar and Clarke's Clinical Medicine (8th Ed) 2012
- Oxford Medical Education; Hepatomegaly, 2021
- Horslen S. Phenotypes of Liver Diseases in Infants, Children, and Adolescents. Diseases of the Liver in Children. 2013;107-131. Published 2013 Aug 23. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-9005-0_6
- Jaan A, Rajnik M; TORCH Complex
Article history
The information on this page is written and peer reviewed by qualified clinicians.
Next review due: 9 Mar 2027
10 Mar 2022 | Latest version
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