Acute Liver Failure

Author(s):  
James Y. Findlay ◽  
Eelco F. M. Wijdicks

Acute liver failure (ALF) is an uncommon condition in which an acute insult results in a rapid deterioration of liver function, encephalopathy, and coagulopathy in the absence of prior underlying liver disease. It is differentiated from rapid deterioration in the setting of underlying liver disease (acute on chronic liver failure) and from the gradual deterioration in liver function that can occur in chronic liver failure.

2020 ◽  
pp. 3089-3100
Author(s):  
Jane Macnaughtan ◽  
Rajiv Jalan

Liver failure occurs when loss of hepatic parenchymal function exceeds the capacity of hepatocytes to regenerate or repair liver injury. Acute liver failure is characterized by jaundice and prolongation of the prothrombin time in the context of recent acute liver injury, with hepatic encephalopathy occurring within 8 weeks of the first onset of liver disease. Acute-on-chronic liver failure is characterized by hepatic and/or extrahepatic organ failure in patients with cirrhosis associated with an identified or unidentified precipitating event. The commonest causes of acute liver failure are acute viral hepatitis and drugs. Acute-on-chronic liver failure is most commonly precipitated by infection, alcohol abuse, and superimposed viral infection. The main clinical manifestations are hepatic encephalopathy, coagulopathy, jaundice, renal dysfunction, and haemodynamic instability. Infection and systemic inflammation contribute to pathogenesis and critically contribute to prognosis. Specific therapy for the underlying liver disease is administered when available, but this is not possible for most causes of liver failure. Treatment is predominantly supportive, with particular emphasis on (1) correction or removal of precipitating factors; (2) if encephalopathy is present, using phosphate enemata, nonhydrolysed disaccharide laxatives, and/or rifaximin; (3) early detection and prompt treatment of complications such as hypoglycaemia, hypokalaemia, cerebral oedema, infection, and bleeding. The onset of organ failure should prompt discussion with a liver transplantation centre. The mortality of acute liver failure (without liver transplantation) is about 40%. Patients with acute liver failure who do not develop encephalopathy can be expected to recover completely. Those who recover from an episode of acute-on-chronic liver failure should be considered for liver transplantation because otherwise their subsequent mortality remains high.


Author(s):  
Carl Waldmann ◽  
Neil Soni ◽  
Andrew Rhodes

Jaundice 348Acute liver failure 350Hepatic encephalopathy 352Chronic liver failure 354Abnormal liver function tests 356Jaundice (icterus) is the accumulation of bile pigments in serum and tissues including sclerae and skin. Jaundice is usually clinically detectable once serum bilirubin exceeds 50...


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-95
Author(s):  
Ton Lisman ◽  
Bethlehem Arefaine ◽  
Jelle Adelmeijer ◽  
Ane Zamalloa ◽  
Eleanor Corcoran ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 118-123
Author(s):  
Jayanta Paul

Acute on chronic liver failure (ACLF) can be precipitated by several factors such as bacterial infection, alcohol intake, viral hepatitis, surgery, etc. Identification of precipitating factor is an important part of management of ACLF. A middle aged gentleman was presented with features of acute liver failure and after through history and investigations, he was diagnosed as acute on chronic liver failure. Chronic liver disease was first diagnosed after this event of acute insult. Precipitating factor of ACLF was dengue fever in this case report. Therefore, in endemic area of dengue infection, dengue serology tests which are not routinely done should be advised to identify dengue infection as an acute insult in ACLF.


2020 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. S496-S497
Author(s):  
Ton Lisman ◽  
Bethlehem Arefaine ◽  
Jelle Adelmeijer ◽  
Ane Zamalloa ◽  
William Bernal ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 280-283
Author(s):  
Kenneth Einar Himma

In “A Critique of UNOS Liver Allocation Policy,” I argued that the UNOS policy of placing acute liver failure patients (ALF patients) above chronic liver failure patients (CLF patients) on the transplant list fails to satisfy the principles of utility and justice that ostensibly guide UNOS allocation policy. Further, I argued that physician discretion in evaluating ALF and CLF patients should be expanded—not constrained. In response, Dr. Burdick attempts to justify the policy constraints on physician discretion on the strength of objective differences between ALF and CLF; as he puts it, “the distinction between acute liver failure and progression of chronic liver disease … is clear in the way brain death is.”


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document