Fatal deterioration of neurological disease after orthotopic liver transplantation for valproic acid-induced liver damage
- PMID: 10933322
- DOI: 10.1034/j.1399-3046.2000.00115.x
Fatal deterioration of neurological disease after orthotopic liver transplantation for valproic acid-induced liver damage
Abstract
We describe a 12-year-old girl with an early onset neurologic disease of slow progressiveness and electro-encephalography showing epileptic activity. The girl developed fulminant liver failure 5 months after the start of valproic acid treatment. Repeated mitochondrial assays failed to prove a mitochondrial disorder, but muscle biopsies were slightly pathological. Liver histology indicated acute-on-chronic liver disease. Six weeks after a successful orthotopic liver transplantation her neurological condition deteriorated rapidly, soon leading to generalized cortical disease and death. Post-mortem brain examination showed advanced central nervous destruction. We suggest that this is a late-onset Huttenlocher variant of Alpers' syndrome, where fulminant liver failure can be triggered by valproic acid, and orthotopic liver transplantation can subsequently trigger a fatal neurologic deterioration. Our case illustrates that when a referral center receives a previously unknown patient with hepatocellular insufficiency, it might be impossible to differentiate between fulminant vs. acute-on-chronic liver failure, and the decision whether to perform a liver transplantation or not would become difficult.
Comment in
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Liver transplantation: to do or not to do?Pediatr Transplant. 2000 Aug;4(3):170-2. doi: 10.1034/j.1399-3046.2000.00125.x. Pediatr Transplant. 2000. PMID: 10933314 No abstract available.
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