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Hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver characterized by diffuse or patchy necrosis. Major causes are specific hepatitis viruses, alcohol, and drugs (eg, isoniazid). Less common causes include other viral infections (eg, infectious mononucleosis, yellow fever, cytomegalovirus infection) and leptospirosis. Parasitic infections (eg, schistosomiasis, malaria, amebiasis), pyogenic infections, and abscesses that affect the liver are not considered hepatitis. Liver involvement with TB and other granulomatous infiltrations is sometimes called granulomatous hepatitis, but the clinical, biochemical, and histologic features differ from those of diffuse hepatitis.
Various systemic infections and other illnesses may produce small focal areas of hepatic inflammation or necrosis. This nonspecific reactive hepatitis can cause minor liver function abnormalities but is usually asymptomatic.
Some types of infectious and noninfectious liver inflammation are summarized in Table 1: Hepatitis: Selected Diseases or Organisms Associated With Liver Inflammation .
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Table 1
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| Selected Diseases or Organisms Associated With Liver Inflammation |
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Disease or Organism
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Manifestations
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Viruses
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In neonates: Hepatomegaly, jaundice, congenital defects
In adults: Mononucleosis-like illness with hepatitis; may occur posttransfusion
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Infectious mononucleosis
Clinical hepatitis with jaundice in 5–10%; subclinical liver involvement in 90–95%
Acute hepatitis sometimes severe in young adults
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Jaundice, systemic toxicity, bleeding
Liver necrosis with little inflammatory reaction
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Hepatic infection occasionally due to echovirus or coxsackievirus infections, varicella, herpes simplex, rubella, or rubeola
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Bacteria
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Granulomatous reaction of liver with progressive necrotizing abscesses
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Serious infection acquired via portal pyemia, cholangitis, or hematogenous or direct spread; due to various organisms, especially gram-negative and anaerobic
Illness and toxicity, yet only mild liver dysfunction
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Hepatic involvement (common; usually subclinical) with granulomatous infiltration; jaundice (rare)
Disproportionately increased alkaline phosphatase
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Minor focal hepatitis in numerous systemic infections (common; usually subclinical)
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Fungi
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Granulomas in liver and spleen (usually subclinical) that heal with calcification
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Granulomatous infiltration sometimes occurring in cryptococcosis, coccidioidomycosis, blastomycosis, or other infections
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Protozoa
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Important disease, often without obvious dysentery
Usually a large single abscess with liquefaction
Systemic illness, tender hepatomegaly, surprisingly mild liver dysfunction
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A common cause of hepatosplenomegaly in endemic areas
Jaundice absent or mild unless active hemolysis is present
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Transplacental infection
In neonates: Jaundice, CNS and other systemic manifestations
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Infiltration of reticuloendothelial system by parasite, hepatosplenomegaly
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Helminths
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Biliary obstruction by adult worms, parenchymal granulomas caused by larvae
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Biliary tract infestation, cholangitis, stones, cholangiocarcinoma
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One or more hydatid cysts, which usually have a calcified rim and may be large but which often are asymptomatic and do not disrupt liver function
Can rupture into the peritoneum or biliary tract
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Acute: Tender hepatomegaly, fever, eosinophilia
Chronic: Biliary fibrosis, cholangitis
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Periportal granulomatous reaction to ova with progressive hepatosplenomegaly, pipestem fibrosis, portal hypertension, and varices
Hepatocellular function preserved; not true cirrhosis
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Visceral larva migrans syndrome
Hepatomegaly with granulomas, eosinophilia
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Spirochetes
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Acute fever, prostration, jaundice, bleeding, renal injury
Liver necrosis (often mild despite severe jaundice)
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Congenital: Neonatal hepatosplenomegaly, fibrosis
Acquired: Variable hepatitis in secondary stage, gummas with irregular scarring in tertiary stage
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Borrelia infection
Systemic symptoms, hepatomegaly, sometimes jaundice
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Unknown
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Idiopathic granulomatous hepatitis
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Active chronic granulomatous inflammation not resulting from known causes (sarcoid variant?)
May cause mainly systemic symptoms (eg, fever, malaise) and can occur when certain drugs are used
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Sarcoidosis
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Granulomatous infiltration (common, usually subclinical), jaundice (rare)
Occasionally, progressive inflammation with scarring and portal hypertension
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Ulcerative colitis, Crohn disease
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Spectrum of hepatic disease, especially in ulcerative colitis; includes periportal inflammation (pericholangitis), sclerosing cholangitis, cholangiocarcinoma, and autoimmune hepatitis
Poor correlation between hepatic function and activity of bowel disorder
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*Differentiate from amebiasis with serologic tests for amebas and direct percutaneous abscess aspiration.
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Last full review/revision March 2013 by Anna E. Rutherford, MD, MPH
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