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What Liver Diseases Lead to Transplantation?
Metabolic Diseases
- Alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency
- Tyrosinemia
- Glycogen storage disease
- Type 4
- Type 3
- Type 2
- Type 1
- Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD)
- Wilson’s disease
- Neonatal hemochromatosis
- Urea cycle deficiency
Acute and Chronic Hepatitis
- Fulminant hepatic failure
- Viral
- Toxin or drug induced
- Chronic active hepatitis with cirrhosis
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis C
- Autoimmune
- Idiopathic
Intrahepatic Cholestasis
- Idiopathic neonatal hepatitis
- Alagilles syndrome (bile duct paucity syndrome)
- Familial intra-hepatic cholestasis (Byler disease)
Obstructive Biliary Tract Liver Disease
Traumatic and Post-surgical Biliary Tract Diseases
- Hepatic tumors (liver tumors)
- Hepatoblastoma
- Hepatocellular carcinoma
- Other hepatic tumors
Other Types of Liver Disease
- Cryptogenic cirrhosis
- Congenital hepatic fibrosis
- Caroli disease
- Cystic fibrosis
- Cirrhosis secondary to prolonged total parenteral nutrition
- Budd-Chiari
Biliary atresia is the most common liver disease that requires transplantation. The percentage that each liver disease contributes to the total liver transplants performed every year are:
- Biliary atresia 54%
- Metabolic disease 14%
- Acute hepatic necrosis 11%
- Miscellaneous diseases 7%
- Autoimmune and other cirrhosis 7%
- Cholestatic liver disease 4%
- Malignancy 2%
- Congenital hepatic fibrosis 1%
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