Liver failure: Difference between revisions

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imported>Robert Badgett
(New page: In medicine, '''liver failure''', also called '''hepatic failure''' is "severe inability of the liver to perform its normal metabolic functions, as evidenced by severe jaundice...)
 
imported>John Stephenson
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In [[medicine]], '''liver failure''', also called '''hepatic failure''' is "severe inability of the [[liver]] to perform its normal metabolic functions, as evidenced by severe [[jaundice]] and abnormal serum levels of [[ammonia]]; [[bilirubin]]; [[alkaline phosphatase]]; [[aspartate aminotransferase]]; [[lactate dehydrogenases]]; and albumin/globulin ratio."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
In [[medicine]], '''liver failure''', also called '''hepatic failure''' is "severe inability of the [[liver]] to perform its normal metabolic functions, as evidenced by severe [[jaundice]] and abnormal serum levels of [[ammonia]]; [[bilirubin]]; [[alkaline phosphatase]]; [[aspartate aminotransferase]]; [[lactate dehydrogenases]]; and albumin/globulin ratio."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>



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In medicine, liver failure, also called hepatic failure is "severe inability of the liver to perform its normal metabolic functions, as evidenced by severe jaundice and abnormal serum levels of ammonia; bilirubin; alkaline phosphatase; aspartate aminotransferase; lactate dehydrogenases; and albumin/globulin ratio."[1]

Treatment

Among patients with hepatic encephalopathy grades I-II and international normalized ratio ≥ 1.5, intravenous N-acetylcysteine (NAC) for 72 hours may reduce the need for liver transplantation.[2] The trial did not appear to have patients with liver failure due to ethanol.

References