Hepatic Failure/GI/Endocrine Emergencies
Patients with any degree of encephalopathy should be transferred to an ICU, ideally with contact to a
transplant center, because rapid progression can occur.
Diagnostic Work-up
Procedure
History
Assess timing of symptom onset
Assess for exposure history to viruses, drugs (e.g., acetaminophen), or toxins (e.g.,
mushrooms)
Assess substance abuse history
Physical examination
Normal signs of chronic liver disease (e.g., ascites, jaundice, right upper quadrant pain)
may not be present
Assess encephalopathy grade
Laboratory analysis
Basic metabolic panel, CBC, liver function tests, coagulation tests, arterial blood gas,
acetaminophen concentrations, ammonia, toxicology screen, blood typing
Viral serologies
Liver biopsy useful for determining autoimmune hepatitis or ALF associated with HSV
Imaging
Hepatic imaging studies (computed tomography [CT], ultrasonography) may be used to
detect a thrombus of the hepatic vein
ALF = acute liver failure; CBC = complete blood cell count; HSV = herpes simplex virus.
Cause of ALF
Proportion of Cases
Acetaminophen
46%
Indeterminate
12%
Non-acetaminophen drug induced
11%
Hepatitis B
7%
Autoimmune
7%
Ischemic
7%
Hepatitis A
1.5%
Wilson disease
1.2%
Pregnancy
1%
Budd-Chiari
0.7%
Other
7%
ALF = acute liver failure.
Acetaminophen
Acetaminophen overdose is responsible for almost 50% of ALF cases in the United States. Ace-
taminophen overdose is considered the primary cause of ALF in the United States and Europe, and
it was responsible for 70,000 health care encounters and 300 deaths in the United States in 2005.