Results 301 to 310 of about 356,562 (324)
The Effect of Prophylactic Hepatoprotective Therapy on Drug-Induced Liver Injury in Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy for Cervical Cancer: A Retrospective Analysis Based on Propensity Score Matching. [PDF]
Liu Z+6 more
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Clinical Features of Anti-Tuberculosis Drug-Induced Liver Injury and Risk Factors for Severe Cases: A Retrospective Study in China. [PDF]
Zhang S, Dong N, Wang L, Lu Y, Chen X.
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Drug Reaction With Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms and Severe Drug-Induced Liver Injury After Off-Label Zonisamide Use for Weight Loss. [PDF]
Sadjadi R+6 more
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Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and drug induced liver injury: A metabolic storm waiting to happen. [PDF]
Salolin Vargas VP+5 more
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Clinical features and prognosis of drug-induced liver injury in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver. [PDF]
Zhao Y+8 more
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Current Opinion in Gastroenterology, 2012
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) remains an important disease in clinical practice. It is difficult to predict, diagnose and manage. Studies in the peer-reviewed literature in the last 2 years, focusing on the diagnosis, prediction and management of DILI will be reviewed.Antibiotics remain the most common drug causing DILI in the United States and ...
Don C. Rockey, Lafaine M. Grant
+9 more sources
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) remains an important disease in clinical practice. It is difficult to predict, diagnose and manage. Studies in the peer-reviewed literature in the last 2 years, focusing on the diagnosis, prediction and management of DILI will be reviewed.Antibiotics remain the most common drug causing DILI in the United States and ...
Don C. Rockey, Lafaine M. Grant
+9 more sources
The Journal for Nurse Practitioners, 2009
Many drugs and environmental chemicals are capable of evoking some degree of liver injury. The liver represents a primary target for adverse drug reactions due to its central role in biotransformation and excretion of foreign compounds, its portal location within the circulation exposing it to a wide variety of substances, and its anatomic and ...
Changqing Ju, Michael P. Holt
openaire +4 more sources
Many drugs and environmental chemicals are capable of evoking some degree of liver injury. The liver represents a primary target for adverse drug reactions due to its central role in biotransformation and excretion of foreign compounds, its portal location within the circulation exposing it to a wide variety of substances, and its anatomic and ...
Changqing Ju, Michael P. Holt
openaire +4 more sources
Hospital Practice, 1978
In the usual course of events, the liver detoxifies hepatocytotoxic intermediates of drug metabolism. But when protective systems are overloaded by normally harmless drugs, the intermediates can cause massive, even fatal, hepatic necrosis.
Jerry R. Mitchell+1 more
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In the usual course of events, the liver detoxifies hepatocytotoxic intermediates of drug metabolism. But when protective systems are overloaded by normally harmless drugs, the intermediates can cause massive, even fatal, hepatic necrosis.
Jerry R. Mitchell+1 more
openaire +3 more sources
Drug Safety, 2007
Drug-induced liver injury is a frequent cause of hepatic dysfunction. Reliably establishing whether the liver disease was caused by a drug requires the exclusion of other plausible causes and the search for a clinical drug signature. The drug signature consists of the pattern of liver test abnormality, the duration of latency to symptomatic ...
Neil Kaplowitz, Gebran Abboud
openaire +2 more sources
Drug-induced liver injury is a frequent cause of hepatic dysfunction. Reliably establishing whether the liver disease was caused by a drug requires the exclusion of other plausible causes and the search for a clinical drug signature. The drug signature consists of the pattern of liver test abnormality, the duration of latency to symptomatic ...
Neil Kaplowitz, Gebran Abboud
openaire +2 more sources