A 24-year-old female patient presented to her community hospital with mild elevations of serum transaminase and bilirubin levels. Because of multiple sclerosis, she was treated with interferon beta-1a for 6 weeks. After exclusion of viral hepatitis due to hepatitis A–E, interferon beta-1a was withdrawn under the suspicion of drug-induced hepatitis. One week later, she was admitted again to her community hospital with severe icterus. The transaminase and bilirubin levels were highly elevated, and a beginning impairment of the liver synthesis was expressed by a reduced prothrombin time. The confinement to our department occurred with a fulminant hepatitis and the suspicion of beginning acute liver failure. There was no evidence for hepatitis due to potentially hepatotoxic viruses, alcoholic hepatitis, Budd-Chiari syndrome, hemochromatosis, and Wilson’s disease. In her serum there were high titers of liver-kidney microsomal type 1 autoantibody; the serum gamma globulin levels were in the normal range. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy of the liver ruled out an autoimmune hepatitis but showed signs of drug-induced toxicity. During the interview, she admitted that for ‘general immune system stimulation’ she had been drinking Noni juice, a Polynesian herbal remedy made from a tropical fruit (Morinda citrifolia), during the past 4 weeks. After cessation of the Noni juice ingestion, her transaminase levels normalized quickly and were in the normal range within 1 month.
Portopulmonary hypertension (PPHT) is a rare but devastating complication in patients with portal hypertension, characterized by pulmonary arterial obliterative disease with a concomitant rise in pulmonary vascular resistance. A broad body of evidence has accumulated, indicating that endothelin (ET) peptides and their cognate receptors are causally involved in the pathophysiology of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) owing to different aetiologies, including PPHT. In addition, the ET system may be involved in hepatic fibrotic remodelling and portal hypertension. Several experimental models have provided evidence that ET receptor antagonism may have therapeutic potential in PPHT. Initial experience has accumulated during the last 2 years, suggesting that targeting the ET system may have beneficial effects in the clinical setting. In these studies, the orally active, dual ET receptor antagonist bosentan improved pulmonary haemodynamics and functional capacity. These effects were sustained and occurred in the absence of adverse events. If these observations can be corroborated by controlled clinical trials, bosentan would offer several advantages over available therapies, which have major drawbacks owing to their invasive and demanding mode of application.
TIPS is not superior to VBL in the prevention of variceal rebleeding. Furthermore, similar mortality rates in patients treated with TIPS or VBL negate TIPS as the preferred strategy for prevention of variceal rebleeding.
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