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. 1995 Dec;127(6):888-94.
doi: 10.1016/s0022-3476(95)70023-4.

Fulminant hepatitis associated with centrilobular hepatic necrosis in young children

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Fulminant hepatitis associated with centrilobular hepatic necrosis in young children

E M Alonso et al. J Pediatr. 1995 Dec.

Abstract

Objective: To describe fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) in children in the United States with clinical and histopathologic features distinctly different from those typical of FHF.

Patients: Seven young children were seen in early 1994 with encephalopathy, coagulopathy, and elevated aminotransferase levels. Liver failure was preceded by a prodromal viral illness that resulted in a period of fasting without dehydration. Unlike the majority of children with FHF, these patients had serum bilirubin levels < 171 mumol/L (10 mg/dl). All children had received therapeutic doses of acetaminophen during the prodromal illness.

Histopathologic findings: Histologic findings included zonal necrosis of hepatocytes in a centrilobular distribution, which is characteristic of toxic liver injury but is atypical for viral hepatitis and sporadic non-A non-B hepatitis.

Outcome: Six patients recovered spontaneously, and one died of complications of liver failure and fungal sepsis. The cause of this disorder remains unknown, but we postulate a viral or environmental insult that preferentially damages zone 3 hepatocytes. The potential for this injury may have been augmented by ingestion of therapeutic doses of acetaminophen while patients were in a fasted state. The prognosis was good compared with typical FHF in children and correlated with the degree of liver necrosis on histologic examination.

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