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Alcoholic hepatitis is swelling, called inflammation, of the liver caused by drinking alcohol. Drinking alcohol destroys liver cells.
Alcoholic hepatitis most often happens in people who drink heavily over many years. But the link between drinking and alcoholic hepatitis isn't simple. Not all heavy drinkers get alcoholic hepatitis. And some people who drink much less get the disease.
If you're diagnosed with alcoholic hepatitis, you must stop drinking alcohol. People who keep drinking alcohol have a high risk of serious liver damage and death.
The most common sign of alcoholic hepatitis is yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes, called jaundice. The yellowing of the skin might be harder to see on Black and brown people.
Other symptoms include:
People with alcoholic hepatitis tend to be malnourished. Drinking large amounts of alcohol keeps people from being hungry. And heavy drinkers get most of their calories from alcohol.
Other symptoms that happen with severe alcoholic hepatitis include:
Alcoholic hepatitis is a serious, often deadly disease.
See a healthcare professional if you:
Alcoholic hepatitis is caused by damage to the liver from drinking alcohol. Just how alcohol damages the liver and why it does so only in some heavy drinkers isn't clear.
These factors are known to play a role in alcoholic hepatitis:
Other factors that can be involved with alcoholic hepatitis include:
The major risk factor for alcoholic hepatitis is the how much alcohol you drink. It isn't known how much alcohol it takes to cause alcoholic hepatitis.
Most people with this condition have had at least seven drinks a day for 20 years or more. This can mean 7 glasses of wine, 7 beers, or 7 shots of spirits.
However, alcoholic hepatitis can happen to people who drink less and have other risk factors, including:
Complications of alcoholic hepatitis are caused by scar tissue on the liver. Scar tissue can slow blood flow through the liver. That can raise pressure in a major blood vessel called the portal vein and cause a buildup of toxins.
Complications include:
Enlarged veins, called varices. Blood that can't flow freely through the portal vein can back up into other blood vessels in the stomach and the tube through which food passes from the throat to the stomach, called the esophagus.
These blood vessels have thin walls. They're likely to bleed if filled with too much blood. Heavy bleeding in the upper stomach or esophagus is life-threatening and needs medical care right away.
You might reduce your risk of alcoholic hepatitis if you:
Check before mixing medicines and alcohol. Ask your healthcare professional if it's safe to drink alcohol when taking your prescribed medicines. Read the warning labels on medicines you can get without a prescription.
Don't drink alcohol when taking medicines that warn against drinking alcohol while taking them. This includes pain relievers such as acetaminophen (Tylenol, others).
Your healthcare professional does a physical exam and asks about your alcohol use, now and in the past. Be honest about your drinking. Your care professional might ask to talk to family members about your drinking.
Diagnosing liver disease might involve these tests:
Treatment for alcoholic hepatitis involves quitting drinking as well as therapies to ease the symptoms of liver damage.
If you've been diagnosed with alcoholic hepatitis, you need to stop drinking alcohol and never drink alcohol again. It's the only way that might reverse liver damage or keep the disease from getting worse. People who don't stop drinking are likely to have some life-threatening health problems.
If you depend on alcohol and want to stop drinking, your healthcare professional can suggest a therapy that meets your needs. It can be harmful to stop drinking all at once. So discuss a plan with your healthcare professional.
Treatment might include:
Your healthcare professional might suggest a special diet to fix poor nutrition. You might be referred to an expert in diet to manage disease, called a dietitian. A dietitian can suggest ways to eat better to make up for the vitamins and nutrients you lack.
If you have trouble eating, your care professional might suggest a feeding tube. A tube is passed down the throat or through the side and into the stomach. A special nutrient-rich liquid diet is then passed through the tube.
These might help severe alcoholic hepatitis:
For many people with severe alcoholic hepatitis, the risk of dying is high without a liver transplant.
In the past, those with alcoholic hepatitis have not been given new livers. This is because of the risk that they'll continue drinking after transplant. But recent studies suggest that well-chosen people with severe alcoholic hepatitis have survival rates after a transplant similar to people with other types of liver disease who get liver transplants.
For transplant to be an option, you would need:
You might be referred to a digestive disease specialist, called a gastroenterologist.
When you make the appointment, ask if there's anything you need to do before certain tests, such as not eating or drinking.
Make a list of:
Have a relative or friend go with you, if possible, to help you remember the information you're given.
Be sure to ask all the questions you have about your condition.
Your healthcare professional is likely to ask you questions, including: