Alcoholic liver disease medical therapy: Difference between revisions
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| colspan="1" style="text-align:center; background:LightGreen"|[[AASLD guidelines classification scheme#Class of recommendation|Class I]] | | colspan="1" style="text-align:center; background:LightGreen"|[[AASLD guidelines classification scheme#Class of recommendation|Class I]] | ||
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| bgcolor="LightGreen"| '''1.''' <nowiki>"</nowiki> ([[AASLD guidelines classification scheme#Level of evidence|Level of evidence: B]]) <nowiki>"</nowiki> | | bgcolor="LightGreen"| '''1.''' <nowiki>"</nowiki> All patients with [[alcoholic hepatitis]] should be counseled to completely abstain from [[alcohol]]. ([[AASLD guidelines classification scheme#Level of evidence|Level of evidence: B]]) <nowiki>"</nowiki> | ||
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# All patients with alcoholic hepatitis or advanced ALD should be assessed for nutritional deficiencies ([[protein-calorie malnutrition]]), as well as vitamin and mineral deficiencies. Those with severe disease should be treated aggressively with enteral nutritional therapy. | # All patients with alcoholic hepatitis or advanced ALD should be assessed for nutritional deficiencies ([[protein-calorie malnutrition]]), as well as vitamin and mineral deficiencies. Those with severe disease should be treated aggressively with enteral nutritional therapy. | ||
# Patients with mild-moderate alcoholic hepatitis—defined as a Maddrey score of <32, without hepatic encephalopathy, and with improvement in serum bilirubin or decline in the MDF during the first week of hospitalization—should be monitored closely, but will likely not require nor benefit from specific medical interventions other than nutritional support and abstinence. | # Patients with mild-moderate alcoholic hepatitis—defined as a Maddrey score of <32, without hepatic encephalopathy, and with improvement in serum bilirubin or decline in the MDF during the first week of hospitalization—should be monitored closely, but will likely not require nor benefit from specific medical interventions other than nutritional support and abstinence. |
Revision as of 07:05, 28 October 2012
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
The most important part of treatment is to stop using alcohol completely. If liver cirrhosis has not yet occurred, the liver can heal if you stop drinking alcohol.
An alcohol rehabilitation program or counseling may be necessary to break the alcohol addiction. Vitamins, especially B-complex and folic acid, can help reverse malnutrition.
If cirrhosis develops, there is a need to manage the complications of cirrhosis. It may need a liver transplant.
Medical therapy
General
- Abstinence from alcohol
- Counseling and family support during alcohol abstinence
- Naltrexone or acamprosate to reduce relapse
- Nutritional support - Adequate amounts of carbohydrates and calories as alcoholics are commonly malnourished. This prevents endogenous protein catabolism, and hypoglycemia. Administration of thiamine is important with glucose supplements. This is so because glucose administration increases B1 consumption and B1 deficiency may lead to Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome.
- Folic acid, thiamine, and zinc supplements are recommended.
Drug therapy
Alcoholic hepatitis
- Methylprednisolone
- Decreases short term mortality
- Usually given for 1 month
- Serum bilirubin is used as a predictor for treatment success. Failure of the serum bilirubin level to decline after 7 days of treatment predicts poor prognosis
- Another predictor of treatment is Lille model comprising, age, serum creatinine, serum albumin, prothrombin time (or INR), serum bilirubin on admission, and serum bilirubin on day 7
- Pentoxifylline
- It is a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor
- Used in patients with contraindications to steroids
- Usually given for 1 months
- Decreases mortality
- Decreases risk of hepatorenal syndrome
Other less commonly used drugs
2010 AASLD/ACG Alcoholic Liver Disease Guidelines : Treatment of Alcohol Hepatitis (DO NOT EDIT)[1]
Class I |
1. " All patients with alcoholic hepatitis should be counseled to completely abstain from alcohol. (Level of evidence: B) " |
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Recommendations for long-term management of Alcoholic Liver Disease (DO NOT EDIT)
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References
- ↑ "www.aasld.org" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-10-27.