EASL Clinical Practice Guideline: Occupational liver diseases.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2019-09-17

Authors

European Association for the Study of the Liver. Electronic address: easloffice@easloffice.eu
Clinical Practice Guideline Panel: Chair:
Panel members:
EASL Governing Board representative:

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

A variety of chemicals have been linked to occupational liver diseases, including several solvents and mixtures thereof, pesticides, and metals. Workplace exposures have been associated with virtually the entire spectrum of acute and chronic liver diseases. However, their prevalence is inadequately quantified and their epidemiology limited. Occupational liver diseases may result from high accidental or from prolonged lower level exposures. Whereas the former is uncommon and easily recognised, the latter are relatively more frequent but often overlooked because they may display normal values of conventional markers, have an insidious onset and be asymptomatic or be obfuscated and confounded by concurrent conditions. In addition, specific tests of toxicity are not available, histopathology may not be revealing and the assessment of internal dose of chemicals is usually not decisive. Given these circumstances, the diagnosis of these liver disorders is challenging, one of exclusion and often requires an interdisciplinary approach. These recommendations offer a classification of the type of liver injuries associated with occupational exposures - based in part on the criteria for drug-induced liver injury - a grading of their severity, and the diagnostic and preventive criteria for chemically induced occupational liver disease.

Description

MeSH Terms

Adult
Female
Humans
Incidence
Liver Diseases
Male
Occupational Diseases
Occupational Exposure
Pesticides
Prevalence
Risk Factors
Solvents

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

Citation