DILI Basics - The Liver's Drug Problem
- A diagnosis of exclusion in acute liver injury of unknown cause.
- Two main types:
- Intrinsic (Predictable): Dose-dependent, short latency (e.g., Acetaminophen toxicity via NAPQI metabolite).
- Idiosyncratic (Unpredictable): Not dose-related, variable latency. Most common form (e.g., Augmentin, Isoniazid).
- 📌 Common Culprits: Antibiotics, Anticonvulsants, Acetaminophen, Allopurinol.
⭐ Hy's Law: Predicts severe DILI. Defined by hepatocellular injury (↑ ALT/AST >3x ULN) with ↑ Total Bilirubin >2x ULN, without cholestasis. Carries a 10-50% mortality risk.

Injury Patterns - A Tale of Two Cells
- Hepatocellular: Direct hepatocyte damage.
- Labs: Predominant ↑↑ ALT.
- Drugs: Acetaminophen, Isoniazid, Statins, Valproate.
- Cholestatic: Bile flow obstruction.
- Labs: Predominant ↑↑ ALP.
- Drugs: Augmentin, Anabolic steroids, OCPs.
- Mixed: Features of both.
Classification uses the R-value: $R = (ALT / ULN) / (ALP / ULN)$
- Hepatocellular: R ≥ 5
- Cholestatic: R ≤ 2
- Mixed: 2 < R < 5
⭐ Hy's Law: DILI causing hepatocellular jaundice (↑ Bilirubin) without initial cholestasis (normal ALP) indicates severe injury with >10% mortality risk.

The Detective Work - Diagnosis & Causality
- A diagnosis of exclusion requiring high suspicion and a meticulous drug/herb history (timing, dose, duration).
- Primary task: Rule out other causes (viral, autoimmune, alcoholic, metabolic, biliary obstruction).
- Calculate the R-value to classify injury pattern:
- $R = (ALT_{patient} / ALT_{ULN}) / (ALP_{patient} / ALP_{ULN})$
- Hepatocellular: R ≥ 5
- Cholestatic: R ≤ 2
- Mixed: 2 < R < 5
- Causality: Formally assessed with the Roussel Uclaf Causality Assessment Method (RUCAM).
⭐ Acetaminophen is the leading cause of drug-induced acute liver failure in the United States.

The Perp Lineup - Common Culprit Drugs
- Hepatocellular Necrosis (Direct & Idiosyncratic):
- Acetaminophen (dose-dependent), NSAIDs, Statins
- Isoniazid, Halothane, Valproate, Phenytoin
- Cholestatic Injury:
- Amoxicillin-clavulanate, Erythromycin
- Anabolic steroids, Oral contraceptives
- Other Patterns:
- Amiodarone, Methotrexate (steatohepatitis, fibrosis)
📌 Mnemonic "Rule of A's": Acetaminophen, Augmentin, Allopurinol, Anesthetics (Halothane), Amiodarone, Antiepileptics.
⭐ Amoxicillin-clavulanate is a classic cause of cholestatic DILI, which can have a delayed onset of weeks to months, even after discontinuing the drug.
Damage Control - Management & Prognosis
- Primary Therapy: Prompt withdrawal of the suspected offending drug is critical.
- Management Algorithm:
⭐ Hy's Law: Key prognostic indicator. Defined as hepatocellular injury (↑ALT/AST >3x ULN) with ↑Total Bilirubin >2x ULN, portending a 10-50% mortality risk.
- Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI) is a diagnosis of exclusion after ruling out other common causes of liver disease.
- Acetaminophen toxicity is the leading cause of acute liver failure in the U.S.; the antidote is N-acetylcysteine.
- Intrinsic DILI is predictable and dose-dependent (e.g., acetaminophen), whereas idiosyncratic DILI is unpredictable.
- Key culprits include amoxicillin-clavulanate, isoniazid, anticonvulsants (valproate, phenytoin), and statins.
- The cornerstone of management is prompt withdrawal of the offending drug.
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