Acute Fatty Liver of Pregnancy

A Reassessment Based on Observations in Nine Patients

  1. CAROLINE A. RIELY, M.D.;
  2. PATRICIA S. LATHAM, M.D.;
  3. ROBERTO ROMERO, M.D.; and
  4. THOMAS P. DUFFY, M.D.
  1. New Haven, Connecticut; and Baltimore, Maryland

    Abstract

    Acute fatty liver of pregnancy was diagnosed in nine patients over a 10-year period. Eight patients had severe hepatic dysfunction typical for this syndrome and one had subclinical disease but typical hepatic histologic findings. All patients survived with little fetal wastage; all had preeclampsia. Histologic findings included cholestasis, hepatocellular necrosis, and inflammation, as well as microvesicular fat. Histologic findings from biopsy specimens of four of seven patients were initially misinterpreted as hepatitis. This disorder may have both a broad clinical and histologic spectrum; it is probably not rare but often misdiagnosed, perhaps as viral hepatitis. The concurrence of this disorder with toxemia of pregnancy suggests that these entities may be pathophysiologically related.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸ From the Liver Study Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland.

    • Grant support: in part by grant AM34989-02, NIDDK, from the Digestive Diseases Research Center.

    • ▸ Requests for reprints should be addressed to Caroline A. Riely, M.D.; Liver Study Unit, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street; New Haven, CT 06510.

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