• Journal of hepatology · Jan 1995

    Review

    Viral causes and management of acute liver failure.

    • C Tibbs and R Williams.
    • Institute of Liver Studies, King's College Hospital, London, U.K.
    • J. Hepatol. 1995 Jan 1;22(1 Suppl):68-73.

    AbstractInfection with an identified hepatotrophic virus accounts for 13-50% of acute liver failure (ALF) in Europe, and an additional 16-17% of cases have non-A non-B or indeterminate hepatitis in whom a viral aetiology is presumed. Hepatitis C is rarely responsible for acute liver failure in Europe and North America but accounts for a higher proportion of cases in Japan, and hepatitis E may lead to ALF, particularly in pregnant women. The survival in cases of acute liver failure associated with hepatitis A is 70%, whereas less than 30% of those with non-A non-B hepatitis survive without a transplant. Management depends on intensive care support and careful selection of patients likely to benefit from transplantation. Recurrence of hepatitis A and non-A non-B hepatitis has been reported following transplantation for ALF, and hepatitis B recurs less frequently in these circumstances than after transplantation for chronic infection.

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