1. [A medicinal liver injury with an immunomodulatory drug of natural origin. Case report].
- Author
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Reznik EV, Yudin DV, Gudilova YY, Baikova IE, Karmanova SE, and Nikitin IG
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Immunomodulating Agents, Alkaline Phosphatase, Aspartic Acid, Plant Extracts adverse effects, Bilirubin, Transferases, Adjuvants, Immunologic, Alanine, Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury diagnosis, Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury etiology
- Abstract
As practice shows, there are many alternative drugs that cause drug damage to the liver. A case of medicinal damage to the liver with an immunomodulatory herbal preparation Immunostimulating collection, which included St. John's wort, Elecampane, Kopeichnik, Echinacea, Licorice, Rosehip, is presented. A 39-year-old patient came to the clinic with complaints of yellowing of the skin, whites of the eyes, heaviness in the epigastrium after eating, lightening of feces, dark urine, sour taste in the mouth, bloating, pruritus, decreased appetite, pronounced general weakness, drowsiness 10 days after you start taking herbal immunostimulant. The diagnosis of drug damage to the liver was made taking into account the history and laboratory parameters, since the patient had negative markers of viral hepatitis and increasing of biochemical blood tests: alanine transferase up to 2800 U/l (norm up to 32 U/L), aspartate transferase up to 1776 U/l (norm up to 31 U/l), total bilirubin up to 577 U/l (norm up to 21 U/l), direct bilirubin up to 116 U/l (norm up to 4.3 U/l), alkaline phosphatase up to 112 U/l (norm up to 98 U/l). After the withdrawal of the immunomodulator and the appointment of therapy, including diet, enzyme replacement therapy, drugs clinical and laboratory manifestations of liver drug damage completely disappeared. This confirms the leading role of the immunoactive drug, which the patient took in the toxic effect on the liver.
- Published
- 2021
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