AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypoxic hepatitis can be diagnosed easily in patients with cardiac failure using clinical and biochemical signs, but atypical presentations can complicate this process.
  • Two cases are presented where cardiomyopathy was not recognized upon admission, leading to an unusual pattern of liver enzyme elevation that misled diagnostics.
  • Delayed diagnosis and treatment resulted in the deterioration and death of the patients, highlighting the need for awareness of atypical symptoms of hypoxic hepatitis.

Article Abstract

In a clinical setting of cardiac or circulatory failure, the diagnosis of hypoxic (ischaemic) hepatitis is easy and can be elicited on mere clinical and biochemical features. We report two cases of hypoxic hepatitis where cardiomyopathy remained unrecognized at admission due to the lack of conventional signs of congestive heart failure and where the increase in liver enzymes activities followed an atypical pattern, characterized by only moderate elevation of serum aminotransferases activities, low ASAT/ALAT ratio and elevated ALAT/LDH ratio. This atypical pattern not suggestive of hypoxic hepatitis, could be explained by a delay between the onset of hypoxic injury of the liver and admission to hospital. Moreover one case was complicated by frank jaundice, an unusual feature in hypoxic hepatitis. Consequently, diagnosis and appropriate inotropic treatment were delayed resulting in progressive deterioration and eventually death of both patients. The report of these two cases and the review of other similar cases previously published, enlighten some atypical features of hypoxic hepatitis.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hypoxic hepatitis
20
atypical pattern
12
report cases
12
liver enzymes
8
hypoxic
7
hepatitis
5
hepatitis difficult
4
difficult diagnosis
4
diagnosis cardiomyopathy
4
cardiomyopathy remains
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!