Copyright
©The Author(s) 1995.
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 1, 1995; 1(1): 4-8
Published online Oct 1, 1995. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v1.i1.4
Published online Oct 1, 1995. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v1.i1.4
Table 1 Characteristics of subgroups of patients with acute liver failure
| Characteristics | Hyperacute liver failure | Acute liver failure | Subacute liver failure |
| Encephalopathy | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Duration of jaundice | 0-7 d | 8-28 d | 29-72 d |
| Cerebral edema | Common | Common | Seldom |
| Prothrombin time | Prolonged | Prolonged | Least prolonged |
| Bilirubin | Slightly elevated | Elevated | Elevated |
| Prognosis | Moderate | Poor | Poor |
Table 2 Principal causes of acute liver failure
| Causes | Agents responsible |
| Viral hepatitis | Hepatitis A, B, C, D, E, or F (?) virus |
| Herpes simplex virus | |
| Drug related liver injury | Epstein-Barr virus, Cytomegalovirus |
| Toxins | Adenoviruses, Paramyxovirus |
| Vascular events | Acetaminophen |
| Miscellaneous | Idiosyncratic reactions |
| Drug-induced steatosis | |
| Carbon tetrachloride | |
| Amanita phalloides | |
| Phosphorus | |
| Ischemia or shock | |
| Veno-occlusive disease | |
| Heat stroke and Hypothermia | |
| Malignant infiltration | |
| Wilson's disease | |
| Acute fatty liver of pregnancy | |
| Reye's syndrome, Cryptogenic |
Table 3 Drugs implicated in idiosyncratic acute liver failure
| Infrequent causes | Rare causes | Synergistic causes |
| Isoniazid | Carbamazepime | Alcohol and acetaminophen |
| Valproate | Ofloxacin | Trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole |
| Halothane | Ketoconazole | Rifampin and isoniazid |
| Sulfonamides | Niacin | Amoxicillin and clavulanic acid |
| Propylthiouracil | Labetalol | |
| Aiodarone | Etoposide (VP-16) | |
| Disulfiram | Imipramine | |
| Dapsone | Interferon alfa | |
| Flutamide |
Table 4 Possible predisposing factors for acute liver failure
| Etiologic agents | |
| Viruses | various hepatotropic viruses |
| superinfection of hepatotropic viruses | |
| variants of a hepatotropic virus (mutants) | |
| Chemicals | |
| Miscellaneous | |
| Host factors | |
| Hyperfunction of cellular immunity | |
| Hyperfunction of antibody production → immune complexes | |
| Endogenous endotoxemia | |
| Deficient phagocytosis of reticuloendothetial system | |
| Activation of macrophages | overproduction of TNF-α and IL-1 |
| release of leukotrienes | |
| release of superoxides | |
| Liver regeneration failure | overproduction of regeneration-suppressing factors |
| disorders in cell receptors and signal transduction | |
| Apoptosis | |
Table 5 Management of complications of acute liver failure
| Hypoglycemia | (10%) dextrose continuous infusion | |
| Bolus (50%) dextrose solution | ||
| Encephalopathy | Lactulose per NG enemas | |
| Neomycin/metronidazole/polymycin B | ||
| GI therapy + branched chain amino acids | prostaglandins | |
| plasma exchange | ||
| Rule out sepsis, GI bleeding | hypoxia, drug effects | |
| hypoglycemia, acid-base imbalance | ||
| Cerebral edema | Restrict fluids, Avoid patient stimulation | |
| Mannitol bolus | ||
| Consider intracranial pressure | monitoring, thiopental infusion | |
| Hypotension | Consider GI bleed/hypovolemia/septic shock | |
| Optimize cardiac filling pressure | ||
| Dopamine ± norepinephrine infusion | ||
| Hypoxia | Endotracheal intubation, Mechanical ventilation | |
| Sepsis | Broad-spectrum antibiotics, Consider fungal sepsis |
Table 6 Criteria for predicting death and the need for liver transplantation at King's College Hospital, London1
| Cause of ALF | Criteria |
| Acetaminophen poisoning | pH < 7.3 (irrespective of grade of encephalopathy) or Prothrombin time > 100 s and serum creatinine > 300 μmol/L (3.4 mg/dL) in patients with grade III or IV encephalopathy |
| All other causes | Prothrombin time > 100 s (irrespective of grade of encephalopathy) |
| Any three of the following variables (irrespective of grade of encephalopathy): age < 10 yr or > 40 yr; liver failure caused by non-A, non-B hepatitis, halothane-induced hepatitis, or idiosyncratic drug reactions; duration of jaundice before onset of encephalopathy > 7 d; prothrombin time > 50 s; serum bilirubin > 300 mmol/L (17.5 mg/dL) |
- Citation: Pan BR, Yang SF, Ma LS. Acute liver failure: A progress report. World J Gastroenterol 1995; 1(1): 4-8
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v1/i1/4.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v1.i1.4
