Association between consumption of Herbalife nutritional supplements and acute hepatotoxicity
- PMID: 17692424
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2007.06.016
Association between consumption of Herbalife nutritional supplements and acute hepatotoxicity
Abstract
Background/aims: Nutritional supplements are frequently considered to be harmless but indiscriminate use of unlabelled ingredients may lead to significant adverse reactions.
Methods: In 2004, identification of four index cases of acute hepatitis associated with Herbalife intake led to a ministry of health investigation in all Israeli hospitals. Twelve patients with acute idiopathic liver injury in association with consumption of Herbalife products were investigated.
Results: Eleven of the patients were females, aged 49.5+/-13.4 y. One patient had stage I primary biliary cirrhosis and another had hepatitis B. Acute liver injury was diagnosed after 11.9+/-11.1 months of initiation of Herbalife consumption. Liver biopsies demonstrated active hepatitis, portal inflammation rich with eosinophils, ductular reaction and parenchymal inflammation with peri-central accentuation. One patient developed sub-fulminant and two fulminant episodes of hepatic failure. Hepatitis resolved in eleven patients, while one patient succumbed to complications following liver transplantation. Three patients resumed consumption of Herbalife products following normalization of liver enzymes, resulting in a second bout of hepatitis.
Conclusions: An association between intake of Herbalife products and acute hepatitis was identified in Israel. We call for prospective evaluation of Herbalife products for possible hepatotoxicity. Until then, caution should be exercised by consumers, especially among individuals suffering from underlying liver disease.
Comment in
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Slimming at all costs: Herbalife-induced liver injury.J Hepatol. 2007 Oct;47(4):444-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2007.07.010. Epub 2007 Jul 27. J Hepatol. 2007. PMID: 17692988 No abstract available.
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Spanish reports of hepatotoxicity associated with Herbalife products.J Hepatol. 2008 Aug;49(2):289-90; author reply 290-1. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2008.05.007. Epub 2008 May 23. J Hepatol. 2008. PMID: 18571274 No abstract available.
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