Open AccessJournal Article
Drug-induced hepatotoxicity.
Raúl J. Andrade,M.I. Lucena +1 more
927
TL;DR: The influence of older age in the cholestatic/mixed expression of the liver injury, as well as the independent association of female gender, older age, aspartate aminotransferase levels/hepatocellular type of damage and high bilirubin levels with the risk of fulminant liver failure/death are underlined.
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Abstract: Pharmaceutical preparations, but also herbal products and dietary supplements, are emerging contributors to severe forms of liver disease, with hepatotoxicity ranking as the most frequent cause for acute liver failure. Although acetaminophen intoxication is still the reason for many severe cases of druginduced liver injury, the bulk of hepatic reactions to drugs are idiosyncratic. Indeed, the rarity of this serious adverse event prevents its detection in clinical trials. Therefore, in order to collect reliable data, prospective post-marketing studies are needed, especially with commonly used drugs that have been shown to be associated with drug-induced liver injury. Recently, different databases have described acetaminophen, antibiotics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and anticonvulsants as being associated with drug-induced liver injury. Clinical presentations of drug-induced liver injury include predominantly a hepatocellular type of damage, yet cholestatic and mixed types are also common, the determinants of the type of damage induced by a given drug being poorly understood. Recent analysis of pooled data has underlined the influence of older age in the cholestatic/mixed expression of the liver injury, as well as the independent association of female gender, older age, aspartate aminotransferase levels/hepatocellular type of damage and high bilirubin levels with the risk of fulminant liver failure/death. In the long-term (proving the patient survives to the initial episode) cholestatic mixed type of damage is more prone to become chronic, while in the hepatocellular pattern the severity is greater, with further likelihood of evolution to cirrhosis. Cardiovascular and central nervous system drugs have been found to be the main groups leading to chronic liver damage. The diagnosis of hepatotoxicity remains a difficult task because of the lack of reliable markers for use in general clinical practice. To incriminate any given drug in an episode of liver dysfunction is a step-by-step process that requires a high degree of suspicion, compatible chronology, awareness of the drug’s hepatotoxic potential, the exclusion of alternative causes of liver damage, and the ability to detect the presence of subtle data that favors a toxic etiology. This process is time-consuming and the final result is frequently inaccurate. Diagnostic algorithms may add consistency to the diagnostic process by translating the suspicion into a quantitative score. Such scales are useful since they provide,
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Citations
Endoplasmic reticulum stress in drug- and environmental toxicant-induced liver toxicity.
TL;DR: Current knowledge on drugs and environmental toxicants that trigger ER stress in liver and on the underlying molecular mechanisms are summarized and experimental approaches for ER stress studies are discussed.
Risperidone-induced cholestatic hepatitis
TL;DR: Over the course of one month after the discontinuance of all anti-psychotic agents, the liver function test results returned to near-normal values, which supports the need to monitor cholestatic parameters in addition to liver function enzymes during initiation and the first weeks of risperidone intake.
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A composite screening tool for medication reviews of outpatients: general issues with specific examples.
TL;DR: A wide range of general prescription-, treatment- and patient-related issues that should be taken into account when reviewing medication patterns by implicit screening are discussed.
Case report: mixed cholestatic/hepatocellular liver injury induced by the herbicide quizalofop-p-ethyl.
TL;DR: The case of a farmer exposed to quizalofop-p-ethyl who presented with obstructive cholestasis and liver biopsy established drug-induced hepatotoxicity, and possible mechanisms implicated in liver injury after exposure to the herbicide are discussed.
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Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
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TL;DR: The primary aim was to compare presenting clinical features and liver transplantation in patients with acute liver failure related to acetaminophen hepatotoxicity, other drugs, indeterminate factors, and other causes.
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•Book
Hepatotoxicity: The Adverse Effects of Drugs and Other Chemicals on the Liver
Hyman J. Zimmerman
- 01 Jan 1978
TL;DR: The hepatotoxic effects of oncotherapeutic and immunosuppressive agents miscellaneous drugs and diagnostic chemicals afterthoughts on hepatotoxicity appendices are described.
938
Incidence of drug-induced hepatic injuries: a French population-based study.
Catherine Sgro,François Clinard,Kader Ouazir,Henry Chanay,Christian Allard,Christian Guilleminet,Claude Lenoir,Alain Lemoine,Patrick Hillon +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a population-based study was conducted to assess the incidence and seriousness of hepatic adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in the general population, and the main drugs implicated were antiinfectious, psychotropic, hypolipidemic agents, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).
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