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[COVID-19 as a trigger of autoimmune hepatitis. Case report].

E A VolchkovaK S LegkovaT B Topchiy
Published in: Terapevticheskii arkhiv (2022)
Over the past two years, the entire medical community has taken up the fight against the new coronavirus infection. At the initial encounter with COVID-19, it seemed that this virus mainly affects the respiratory system. Still, with long-term observation, it turned out that the consequences of this disease can be much more severe and associated with lung damage and thromboembolic complications, and be a trigger for autoimmune diseases. According to the literature, after suffering COVID-19, some patients debuted systemic lupus erythematosus, hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, developed GuillainBarr syndrome, vasculitis, and multiple sclerosis, and a case of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) was described in foreign literature. AIH is a fairly rare disease, the prevalence of which in Europe is 1618 cases per 100 thousand inhabitants, affecting mainly women. It is known that chemicals and drugs (minocycline, diclofenac, methyldopa, infliximab, etanercept), viruses (HAV, HEV, EBV, HCV, CMV), environmental factors can serve as triggers of the autoimmune process in the liver. This article presents two clinical cases of AIH that developed after suffering a new coronavirus infection, which we consider as the initial provoking factor of autoimmune inflammation. Given the rarity of AIH, the description of new triggers is of clinical interest. It may be useful for doctors of different specialties since they faced drug-induced liver damage against the background of antiviral and immunobiological therapy. In the domestic literature, there have not yet been any publications devoted to the debut of AIH in adults after coronavirus infection.
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