SEARCH:
Antibiotics Largest Cause of Drug-Induced Liver Damage

Antibiotics Largest Cause of Drug-Induced Liver Damage

Related News from HealthDay
Heart Drug May Be a Cancer Fighter
Old, Fat Mice Blamed for Virus Transmission
More Than 60,000 Patients Risked Hepatitis Infections
It Pays to Eat Less as You Age
Researchers Report Progress in Fight Against Fat
Health Care Spending in U.S. Grew at Lowest Rate in a Decade
Health News Archives
   

MONDAY, Dec. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Antibiotics are the single largest class of drugs that cause idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI), researchers say.

The condition accounts for about 13 percent of cases of acute liver failure in the United States and is the most common cause of death from acute liver failure.

DILI is caused by a wide range of prescription and nonprescription medications, nutritional supplements and herbal products. In a new study, Indiana University School of Medicine researchers looked at patients with suspected DILI and found that 73 percent of cases were caused by a single prescription medication, 9 percent by dietary supplements, and 18 percent by multiple agents. Patients with acetaminophen-related liver damage weren't included in the study.

Lead author Dr. Naga P. Chalasani and colleagues found that more than 100 different agents were associated with DILI and that antibiotics (45.5 percent) and nervous system agents (15 percent) were the most common. Among dietary supplements associated with DILI, those that claim to promote weight loss and muscle building accounted for almost 60 percent of cases. At least 20 percent of DILI patients ingested more than one potentially liver-damaging agent.

There was no association between patient gender and severity of DILI, but patients with diabetes had more severe DILI.

The study was published in the journal Gastroenterology.

"DILI is a serious health problem that impacts patients, physicians, government regulators and the pharmaceutical industry. Further efforts are needed in defining its pathogenesis and developing means for the early detection, accurate diagnosis, prevention and treatment," Chalasani said in an American Gastroenterological Association news release.

The researchers noted that DILI remains a diagnosis of exclusion, which means that detailed testing needs to be performed to exclude other causes of liver disease. They emphasized that in patients with suspected DILI, acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection should be carefully ruled out through the use of HCV RNA testing.

More information

The American Liver Foundation has more about liver disease.

 

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.


INSIDE LIFE & MARQUEE


Living a Better LIFE

Laura McFarland and Ross Chandler eye Twin Counties living.


Over 6 million items at your fingertips! Enter a keyword or highlight a category to search or browse at your leisure!
Search by Category

INSIDE more

BACK THEN
Look into history

Photo gallery features scenes from the Twin Counties' past.


Slideshow
Paws Pizazz

See our pet photo gallery and upload a pic of your pet.


Rock Mount Telegram | Weather | Sports | Life | Business News | Opinions | Classifieds | Sitemap
Rocky Mount Cars | Rocky Mount Jobs | Rocky Mount Real Estate

Copyright Thu Jan 08 01:13:47 EST 2009 Rocky Mount Telegram All rights reserved. - Rocky Mount Telegram - Our Partners

By using this service, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement and privacy policy
Registered site users, you may edit your profile.
Having trouble? Visit our help & FAQ