There are a limited number of causes of such an acute hepatitis:
- Viral hepatitis (Hep A, Hep B, Hep C, HSV/CMV)
- Toxic Hepatitis --> tylenol, toxic mushrooms, severe ETOH (AST/ALT rarely above the 100's), other
- Stone in the common bile duct
- Ischemic Hepatitis/Shock Liver/Acute R-sided CHF
- Budd-Chiari Syndrome
- Autoimmune, Wilson's, Pregnancy, Aggressively infiltrating cancer
"Rapid rise of AST and ALT to [>600] followed by sharp fall in 12-72h is said to be typical of acute bile duct obstruction due to a stone"
... The caveat is that if you have a fulminant hepatitis the AST/ALT may decrease because there are no hepatocytes left to die. So it is all in the clinical context.
The discussant was suspicious that this was a case of a biliary stone despite the stone not being seen on ultrasound. This raises an important point. We often rely on imaging to help make the diagnosis; however, we need to be mindful that even the best imaging tests can be falsely negative. I am reminded of the axiom "a rare presentation of a common disease is most likely than a common presentation of a rare disease"
The team also very astutely decided to treat for potential paracetamol/acetaminophen toxicity based on the patient's medication history. There is a great article in NEJM which talks about the treatment of acetaminophen poisoning.
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