1. Does drug-induced liver injury still occur after sevoflurane anesthesia? -A case report
- Author
-
Moon Ok Lee, Seonghyeon Cho, Chaeeun Kim, and Hanna Koh
- Subjects
anesthesia ,anesthetics ,chemical and drug induced liver injury ,liver failure ,liver function tests ,sevoflurane ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 ,Medicine - Abstract
Background Several factors contribute to post-anesthetic hepatic dysfunction, including a decrease in oxygen supply to the liver, direct physical compression of the liver, viral hepatitis, blood transfusions, preexisting hepatic dysfunction, and the use of hepatotoxic drugs. Diagnosing volatile anesthetic drug-induced liver injury (VA-DILI) involves excluding these causes. Case The patient underwent total mastectomy under anesthesia using sevoflurane. He had diabetes, and no abnormal results were found on preoperative laboratory examinations, and surgery was uneventful. Abnormal laboratory findings were observed after surgery, including an aspartate aminotransferase level of 1,417 IU/L, an alanine aminotransferase level of 2,176 IU/L, and a total bilirubin level of 3.8 mg/dl. He presented with symptoms of mild icteric sclera, fatigue, and pruritus. After ruling out other causes of liver injury, we concluded that these results indicated VA-DILI. Conclusions VA-DILI, though rare, we should be aware of the association between the disease and the use of halogenated anesthetics.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF