Fatal amiodarone hepatoxicity.

Am J Gastroenterol

Department of Medicine, Albert B. Chandler Medical Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington.

Published: February 1988

The antiarrhythmic agent amiodarone is associated with numerous adverse effects, but clinically significant liver disease is rare. A patient is described who presented with muscle weakness, hepatomegaly, and ascites following 28 months of amiodarone usage. His condition deteriorated despite discontinuation of amiodarone therapy. A postmortem liver biopsy demonstrated necrosis, fibrosis, hyalin, and phospholipid-laden lysosomal lamellar bodies. Resolution of hepatic dysfunction may not necessarily occur on withdrawal of amiodarone if irreversible damage is already established. We speculate as to the reasons for the reportedly low incidence of overt liver disease, and suggest that hepatic enzyme levels, as well as other indicators of hepatic function, such as the serum albumin concentration, be monitored indefinitely in all patients while taking amiodarone.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

liver disease
8
amiodarone
5
fatal amiodarone
4
amiodarone hepatoxicity
4
hepatoxicity antiarrhythmic
4
antiarrhythmic agent
4
agent amiodarone
4
amiodarone associated
4
associated numerous
4
numerous adverse
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!