Acute alcoholic hepatitis

Background

Acute alcoholic hepatitis is inflammatory liver disease secondary to alcohol use.

  • spectrum from hepatic steatosis to alcoholic hepatitis to cirrhosis
  • history of (usually chronic) alcohol abuse (~80 grams of ethanol daily for 5 years (2))
  • ranges from subclinical cases to severe multisystem dysfunction

Clinical Features

Symptoms:

  • abdominal pain
  • N/V
  • weight loss / fatigue / anorexia

Signs:

  • RUQ tenderness
  • jaundice
  • fever
  • hepatomegaly
  • ascites
  • encephalopathy
  • spider angioma
  • GI bleed/varices
  • malnutrition
  • symptoms of alcohol withdrawal

Cirrhosis is found in 50-60% of cases of alcoholic hepatitis (2).

Differential Diagnosis

Diagnosis

Diagnosis is difficult and relies on a good history (1). Laboratory analysis may find an AST/ALT ratio of >1.5, elevated GGT, elevated WBC (1).

Management

Abstinence from alcohol, nutritional supplementation (thiamine, folate

Disposition

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Amini, Maziyar; Runyon, Bruce. "Alcoholic Hepatitis 2010: A clinician's Guide to Diagnosis and Therapy." World of Gatstroenterol 2010 October 21; 16(39):4905-4912
  2. Basra, Gurjot,et. al. "Symptoms and Signs of Acute Alcoholic Hepatitis." World J Hepatol. 2011 May 27; 3(5): 118–120.