Abnormal serum transaminases following therapeutic doses of acetaminophen in the absence of known risk factors
- PMID: 7555449
- DOI: 10.1007/BF02208663
Abnormal serum transaminases following therapeutic doses of acetaminophen in the absence of known risk factors
Abstract
J.M., a healthy, 25-year-old male, volunteered for a study involving warfarin and acetaminophen. Acetaminophen 1 g four times a day was started for 21 days. Liver function tests taken at regular intervals for the first 12 days were unremarkable. On day 18, however, aspartate aminotransferase (AST) was 527 IU/liter and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) was 166 IU/liter. Acetaminophen was discontinued and serum transaminase levels returned to baseline levels two weeks later (AST = 26, ALT = 20). Analysis of J.M.'s urine samples over the first 18 days showed excretion patterns of glucuronide, sulfate, and glutathione derived cysteine and mercapturic acid conjugates were similar to the other subjects in the study. Acetaminophen causes hepatotoxicity in overdose or malnourished or alcoholic patients, none of which applied to our subject. Differences in metabolic activation and capacity for glutathione synthesis can predispose individuals given therapeutic doses of acetaminophen to adverse effects. Failure to detoxify a highly reactive metabolite, formed by P-450 metabolism, via glutathione conjugation is responsible for the development of acute hepatic necrosis. Accumulation of the toxic metabolite due to depleted glutathione stores may have occurred with prolonged high dosing in our subject and been responsible for his abnormal rise in liver enzymes.
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