Liver Disease Associated with Chronic Arsenic Ingestion
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wiley in Australian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 9 (3) , 310-313
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-5994.1979.tb04146.x
Abstract
The association of chronic liver disease with long-standing arsenic ingestion is well documented, although the spectrum and incidence of liver disease due to arsenic remain uncertain. We report two patients with chronic liver disease and arsenical skin changes that followed previous chronic arsenic ingestion. One patient developed macronodular cirrhosis and the other non-cirrhotic portal hypertension with perisinusoidal fibrosis. The latter patient developed a primary liver cell cancer. There is only one previously reported case of malignant hepatoma in a non-cirrhotic liver complicating chronic arsenicism. Lack of awareness of this uncommon but well described cause of chronic liver disease may account for a small proportion of patients with "cryptogenic" liver disease. Previous arsenic administration should be considered as a cause of chronic liver disease, especially when typical skin changes or internal neoplasia develop.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vinyl Chloride-Associated Liver DiseaseAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1976
- Noncirrhotic Presinusoidal Portal Hypertension Associated with Chronic Arsenical IntoxicationGastroenterology, 1975
- Liver biopsy in psoriatics previously treated with potassium arsenite. A controlled studyActa Dermato-Venereologica, 1974
- Arsenic and Noncirrhotic Portal HypertensionGastroenterology, 1974
- Chronic arsenical poisoning and non-cirrhotic portal hypertension--a case for diagnosis.BMJ, 1971
- Prolonged survival after portal decompression of patients with non-cirrhotic intrahepatic portal hypertensionGut, 1970
- A Case of Cirrhosis and Primary Carcinoma of the Liver in Chronic Industrial Arsenical IntoxicationOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1959
- Arsenical Cancer: A ReviewBritish Journal of Cancer, 1947
- AN ACCOUNT OF THE EPIDEMIC OUTBREAK OF ARSENICAL POISONING OCCURRING IN BEER-DRINKERS IN THE NORTH OF ENGLAND AND THE MIDLAND COUNTIES IN 1900.The Lancet, 1901