Drug-induced liver disease accounts for about 50% of acute or subacute liver failure in the United States. United Network of Organ Sharing (UNOS) data suggest 8%-20% of liver transplantation in this country per year is for fulminant liver failure due to drugs. Even though the most common medication implicated in acute liver injury is acetaminophen (75%), there are numerous other drugs that are responsible for acute and chronic liver injury. A variety of antifungal medications are known to cause a wide range of liver injury from a mild hepatocellular-cholestatic injury pattern to acute/subacute liver failure. Terbinafine is one of the antifungals that have been associated with such liver injuries. We report a case of terbinafine-induced severe liver failure requiring liver transplantation. © 2006 AASLD.
CITATION STYLE
Perveze, Z., Johnson, M. W., Rubin, R. A., Sellers, M., Zayas, C., Jones, J. L., … Shrestha, R. (2007). Terbinafine-induced hepatic failure requiring liver transplantation. Liver Transplantation, 13(1), 162–164. https://doi.org/10.1002/lt.21034
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