Acute-onset autoimmune hepatitis treated with living donor-liver transplantation

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Abstract

A 50-year-old woman was diagnosed with acute-onset autoimmune hepatitis. She did not respond to steroid therapy including pulse therapy, and was subsequently treated with living donor-liver transplantation 36 days after the beginning of steroid therapy. Except for a period of transient mild acute rejection, her liver function tests remained within a normal range for 2.5 years after the operation. The courses of autoimmune hepatitis patients treated with living-donor liver transplantation have not been previously documented to our knowledge. Living donor-liver transplantation is thought to be one of the therapy options for severe autoimmune hepatitis.

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Kawai, K., Michitaka, K., Miyauchi, S., Sano, M., Abe, M., Ninomiya, T., … Onji, M. (2003). Acute-onset autoimmune hepatitis treated with living donor-liver transplantation. Internal Medicine, 42(2), 158–162. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.42.158

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