1. Heat Stroke as a Cause of Liver Failure and Evaluation of Liver Transplant.
- Author
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Martins PN, Brüggenwirth IMA, McDaid J, Hertl M, Kawai T, Elias N, Chung RT, and Markmann JF
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Treatment Outcome, Heat Stroke complications, Heat Stroke diagnosis, Heat Stroke therapy, Liver Failure complications, Liver Failure, Acute diagnosis, Liver Failure, Acute etiology, Liver Failure, Acute surgery, Liver Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Heat stroke is a multiple organ dysfunction syndrome of poorly understood pathogenesis. Exertional heat stroke with acute liver failure is a rarely reported condition. Liver transplant has been recommended as treatment in cases of severe liver dysfunction; however, there are only 5 described cases of long-term survival after this procedure in patients with heat stroke. Here, we present 2 cases of young athletes who developed heat stroke. Both patients developed acute liver failure and were listed for liver transplant. Liver function tests of one patient improved, and he was discharged on postoperative day 13. The other patient showed no signs of improvement and liver biopsy showed massive necrosis. The patient underwent combined kidney-liver transplant and was discharged on postoperative day 17. After a follow-up of longer than 6 years, both patients are doing well with normal liver function and no neurologic sequelae. We also reviewed all published cases of hepatic failure associated with heat stroke and found 9 published cases of liver transplant for heat stroke in the English literature. Conservative management appears to be justified in heat stroke-associated liver failure, even in the presence of accepted criteria for emergency liver transplant. If the liver does not show signs of recovery and hepatic decompensation progresses, liver transplant should be performed.
- Published
- 2022
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