P1: RLJ/OZN P2: KUF
0521779407-D-01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:41
502 Drug and Toxin-Induced Liver Diseases
■Amanita mushroom poisoning: most cases in U.S. occur in the
Pacific Northwest; ingestion of one mushroom can be fatal; toxin
not destroyed by cooking; OLT frequently necessary
■Aflatoxins: HCC
■arsenic: acute exposure – hepatocellular necrosis; chronic – hepatic
angiosarcoma
■carbon tetrachloride (in cleaning solvents, propellant, fire extingui-
sher): potent hepatotoxin with death from liver failure in first week
■vinyl chloride (in solvents): may result in hepatic fibrosis, noncir-
rhotic portal hypertension, and angiosarcoma
Signs & Symptoms
■systemic features of drug hypersensitivity: fever, rash, eosinophilia,
lymphadenopathy, mononucleosis-like syndrome
■temporal pattern of disease evolution and specific exposure
■presentation generally similar to those of chronic, acute, or fulmi-
nant hepatitis of other etiologies
tests
Basic Tests
■CBC, LFTs, INR, PTT; pH if FHF
■drug levels when available (acetaminophen level)
Imaging
■ultrasound: useful to evaluate hepatic vasculature, hepatic echotex-
ture, signs of portal hypertension
Specific Diagnostic Tests:
■primarily to rule out other causes of liver diseases
■liver biopsy: in general, not useful
differential diagnosis
■chronic liver disease: viral, autoimmune, metabolic, vascular, inher-
ited, cholestatic liver diseases
■acute, subfulminant, fulminant liver disease: other drug reaction,
acute viral hepatitis, acute Wilson’s disease, ischemic hepatitis,
autoimmune hepatitis.
management
What to Do First
■recognition and immediate removal/discontinuation of possible
offending drugs and toxins
General Measures
■general supportive measures for acute liver failure