| Literature DB >> 22973230 |
Johannes Hadem1, Christian P Strassburg, Michael P Manns.
Abstract
Acute liver failure (ALF) is characterized by a sudden and severe deterioration of liver function, typically mirrored by a marked increase of the international normalized ratio (INR) and hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Due to various possible causes hepatocytes get damaged via either apoptotic or necrotic pathways. Anticipating the natural prognosis of a patient with ALF is one of the most challenging tasks in hepatology critical care. Important factors that influence the chance of spontaneous recovery are the underlying etiology of acute liver failure, the acuity of disease, and the severity of HE. Once an estimation of the prognosis in the individual patient has been made, this quickly has to be integrated in the discussion whether high-urgency liver transplantation is necessary and justifiable. This decision has to cover several medical, social, and organizational issues. Well organized liver transplantation programs around the world have achieved an impressive improvement of the 1 year survival rate in ALF from around 40% without transplantation up to nearly 80% with transplantation. The recent debate on whether severe acute alcoholic hepatitis could represent a new candidate eligible for high-urgency liver transplantation shows that the topic is still open for discussion.Entities:
Keywords: acute hepatitis; biomarker; emergency liver transplantation; hepatic encephalopathy; hepatic failure; outcome; prognosis
Year: 2012 PMID: 22973230 PMCID: PMC3428778 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Clichy-Villejuif criteria for non-acetaminophen ALF.
| Hepatic encephalopathy AND |
| Factor V <20%, if <30 years of age OR |
| Factor V <30%, if >30 years of age |
King's college criteria.
| Arterial pH <7.3 (regardless of HE) |
| OR all 3 of the following |
| – INR >6.5 |
| – Creatinine >300 μmol/l |
| – HE grade 3–4 |
| INR >6.5 (regardless of HE) |
| OR 3 of 5 of the following (regardless of HE) |
| – Age <10 or >40 years |
| – Etiology: indeterminate, drug-induced |
| – Time interval icterus to encephalopathy > 7 days |
| – INR >3.5 |
| – Bilirubin >300 μmol/l |
Bilirubin Lactate Etiology (BiLE) score.
| BiLE score = |
| Bilirubin (μmol/l)/100 |
| + Lactate (mmol/l) |
| + 4 [in case of indeterminate ALF, Budd-Chiari syndrome or phenprocoumon toxicity] |
| − 2 [in case of acetaminophen toxicity] |
| + 0 [in case of any other ALF etiology] |