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Diagnosis and management of liver disease in pregnancy.
Adv Intern Med. 1990; 35:289-310.AI

Abstract

Liver disease in pregnancy is uncommon, acute viral hepatitis being the most frequent. The latter has a normal prognosis in pregnancy, with the possible exception of NANB hepatitis in India and North Africa. Immunization of neonates born of mothers suffering from acute or chronic HBV is essential and effective. Acute fatty liver of pregnancy has a better prognosis than previously thought, perhaps due to diagnosis of milder cases or improved intensive care. Its etiology is still unknown, but metabolic stress may be important. The confusion and overlap of AFLP, the HELLP syndrome, and liver disease of eclampsia suggest common etiological factors. Urgent delivery of the fetus is recommended in AFLP. The related condition of acute liver rupture may be diagnosed by ultrasound. Successful conservative management has been reported. Estrogens are involved in the pathophysiology of ICP, but this does not explain the profound racial differences in incidence. The nature of the sensitivity to estrogens is not understood, although reduced membrane fluidity, which may be counteracted by S-adenosyl-L-methionine, is one possible explanation. The increased fetal loss associated with ICP suggests that treatment should be more energetic than hitherto. In the worst affected individuals, fetal malnutrition secondary to maternal steatorrhea may be an important factor. In general, patients with chronic liver disease have increased maternal and particularly fetal mortality.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Gastroenterology Unit, United Medical School, Guy's Hospital, London, England.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

2405596

Citation

Wilkinson, M L.. "Diagnosis and Management of Liver Disease in Pregnancy." Advances in Internal Medicine, vol. 35, 1990, pp. 289-310.
Wilkinson ML. Diagnosis and management of liver disease in pregnancy. Adv Intern Med. 1990;35:289-310.
Wilkinson, M. L. (1990). Diagnosis and management of liver disease in pregnancy. Advances in Internal Medicine, 35, 289-310.
Wilkinson ML. Diagnosis and Management of Liver Disease in Pregnancy. Adv Intern Med. 1990;35:289-310. PubMed PMID: 2405596.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Diagnosis and management of liver disease in pregnancy. A1 - Wilkinson,M L, PY - 1990/1/1/pubmed PY - 1990/1/1/medline PY - 1990/1/1/entrez SP - 289 EP - 310 JF - Advances in internal medicine JO - Adv Intern Med VL - 35 N2 - Liver disease in pregnancy is uncommon, acute viral hepatitis being the most frequent. The latter has a normal prognosis in pregnancy, with the possible exception of NANB hepatitis in India and North Africa. Immunization of neonates born of mothers suffering from acute or chronic HBV is essential and effective. Acute fatty liver of pregnancy has a better prognosis than previously thought, perhaps due to diagnosis of milder cases or improved intensive care. Its etiology is still unknown, but metabolic stress may be important. The confusion and overlap of AFLP, the HELLP syndrome, and liver disease of eclampsia suggest common etiological factors. Urgent delivery of the fetus is recommended in AFLP. The related condition of acute liver rupture may be diagnosed by ultrasound. Successful conservative management has been reported. Estrogens are involved in the pathophysiology of ICP, but this does not explain the profound racial differences in incidence. The nature of the sensitivity to estrogens is not understood, although reduced membrane fluidity, which may be counteracted by S-adenosyl-L-methionine, is one possible explanation. The increased fetal loss associated with ICP suggests that treatment should be more energetic than hitherto. In the worst affected individuals, fetal malnutrition secondary to maternal steatorrhea may be an important factor. In general, patients with chronic liver disease have increased maternal and particularly fetal mortality. SN - 0065-2822 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/2405596/Diagnosis_and_management_of_liver_disease_in_pregnancy_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -