Chronic Drug-Induced Liver Injury from Labetalol during the Postpartum Period: A Case Report
Department
OB/GYN
Additional Department
Pathology
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
AJP Reports
Abstract
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is a common cause of transaminitis in pregnancy. A 34-year-old G3P2012 presented 3 weeks postpartum for preeclampsia with severe features. After receiving acute antihypertensive medications, she was discharged home with labetalol. She presented 5 months later with general malaise, scleral icterus, nausea, and mild right upper quadrant pain and found to have significantly elevated transaminitis. She had a negative infectious, autoimmune, biliary, and steatohepatitis workup. A liver biopsy was performed supporting the diagnosis of DILI. After patient self-discontinued labetalol, her hepatitis significantly improved. However, she developed chronic DILI and liver enzymes normalized during her subsequent pregnancy at 34 weeks. Patient's written consent was obtained for this case report. Chronic DILI secondary to labetalol use is a rare and potentially fatal condition that should be considered on the differential for transaminitis during pregnancy and postpartum period.
First Page
e43
Last Page
e47
DOI
10.1055/a-2209-4636
Volume
14
Issue
1
Publication Date
1-1-2024
PubMed ID
38269129
Recommended Citation
Lee, B., Xiong, S., Westen, E. A., & Warner, J. A. (2024). Chronic Drug-Induced Liver Injury from Labetalol during the Postpartum Period: A Case Report. AJP Reports, 14 (1), e43-e47. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2209-4636