Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3805785 Medicine 2007 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Acute liver disease or failure is most often due to viral hepatitis (A, B and E), paracetamol overdose, or inherited metabolic liver disease. The clinical presentation includes jaundice, coagulopathy and encephalopathy. Uncomplicated acute hepatitis resolves spontaneously but progressive acute liver failure is fatal in 70% of cases and requires referral to specialized units to prevent complications and for consideration for liver transplantation. Chronic liver disease may be due to unresolved neonatal liver disease, either inherited biliary hypoplasia or α1-antitrypsin. Chronic viral hepatitis B and C are rare but significant diseases, which require family support and long-term monitoring. Treatment for hepatitis B remains unsatisfactory, but combination therapy for hepatitis C is successful in over 50% of children. In older children, autoimmune liver disease or cystic fibrosis are the commonest causes, but non-alcoholic steatohepatitis is becoming increasingly recognized. Treatment includes specific medication, nutritional support and liver transplantation for end-stage disease. The long-term outcome of liver transplantation is excellent with >80% survival with good quality of life.

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