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Fulminant Hepatic Failure in an African Setting: Etiology, Clinical Course, and Predictors of Mortality
Authors:H. M. Y. Mudawi  B. A. Yousif
Affiliation:Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Khartoum, PO Box 2245, Khartoum, Sudan. hmudawi@hotmail.com
Abstract:This is prospective cross-sectional study on 37 patients presenting to different hospitals in Khartoum state, Sudan, sought to determine the etiology, clinical course, and predictors of mortality in patients presenting with fulminant hepatic failure (FHF). Patients were subclassified into hyperacute, acute, and subacute FHF; all sera were tested for hepatitis A, B, C, and E; negative samples were tested for antinuclear antibodies and anti-smooth muscle antibodies. The commonest etiologic factors included seronegative hepatitis (38%), hepatitis B virus (22%), severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria (8%), autoimmune hepatitis (8%), hepatitis E virus (5%), anti-tuberculous drugs (5%), and lymphomatous infiltration of the liver (5%). The mortality rate was high at 84%. Poor prognostic factors included presentation with grade III/IV encephalopathy, evidence of bacterial infection, and a prolonged prothrombin time of >25 seconds over the controls.
Keywords:Fulminant hepatic failure  Encephalopathy  Predictors of mortality
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