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      Hepatitis A-induced diabetes mellitus, acute renal failure, and liver failure.

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          Abstract

          A 38-year-old otherwise healthy man presented with hepatic failure (aspartate aminotransferase of 7212 U/L, alanine aminotransferase of 6629 U/L, total and direct bilirubin of 10.7 mg/dL) and acute renal failure (creatinine of 11.6 mg/dL and blood urea nitrogen of 42 mg/dL), which required hemodialysis when the creatinine increased to 21 mg/dL, with a blood urea nitrogen of 115 mg/dL, and the patient became oliguric. On admission, this patient also had a lipase of 1833 U/L, amylase of 211 U/L, glucose of 210 mg/dL, and reactive IgM antibody for acute hepatitis A. The hepatitis and acute renal failure resolved in 3 months, but this patient continues to have type II diabetes mellitus 7 years after the hepatitis A infection. This case illustrates that hepatitis A infection may be severe with liver failure, acute renal failure, and permanent diabetes mellitus as sequale of this infection.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am. J. Med. Sci.
          The American journal of the medical sciences
          0002-9629
          0002-9629
          Jun 1999
          : 317
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Internal Medicine at the University of South Florida for Health Sciences and James A. Haley Veterans Hospital, Tampa, 33612, USA.
          Article
          S0002-9629(15)40557-9
          10372844
          89e80661-b9f2-47ac-bd04-14bc41df44dc
          History

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