THE MERCK MANUAL: The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy
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Overview of Hepatitis

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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 InflammationTables.

Table 1

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Last full review/revision March 2013 by Anna E. Rutherford, MD, MPH

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