Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI)
liver damage caused by prescription medications, over-the-counter drugs, herbal products, or dietary supplements. It is one of the most common causes of acute liver failure worldwide and can mimic almost any type of liver disease. DILI can be intrinsic (predictable), where liver injury is dose-dependent and occurs in most people exposed to a toxic dose (e.g., acetaminophen overdose), or idiosyncratic (unpredictable), which occurs in susceptible individuals without clear dose dependency. The severity ranges from mild, reversible enzyme elevations to acute liver failure requiring transplant.
Symptoms
The symptoms of DILI vary widely and can resemble viral hepatitis or autoimmune liver disease. Common presentations include:
Causes
Diagnosis
There is no single test for DILI, so diagnosis relies on careful evaluation: