Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 Hi, Donna, My liver enzymes were high when I was diagnosed with Grave's and the first endo I went to said that because of this, I was a terrible candidate for ATD's. He went as far as telling me that I could be chancing a liver transplant on the drugs. I went for a second and third opinion and was told otherwise. The third endo, who I am still seeing, told me that once treated, they would come down and they did slowly but surely in about 3 months. Your high liver enzymes probably have nothing to do with drinking any everything to do with Grave's. Once that is in check, I'm sure the liver enzymes will be as well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 Hi Donna, Based on what you said, I'd imagine your liver enzymes are fine. Worst case scenario, there'd be slight elevation, and that can be related to hyperthyroidism. There's a general rule for statins (cholesterol-lowering drugs) which should be similar to that for ATDs although I haven't seen an ATD rule. The statin recommendation says enzymes as high as 3 times the high end of the normal range aren't a contraindication to starting statins. Take care, elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2003 Report Share Posted October 30, 2003 I have cp and the 25 I was admitted to the hopital because my liver enzymes were elevated. I have no idea what the cause of it it. The doctor who admitted me who was on call for my doctor wouldn't give me any pain medicine becuase she said the pain medicine caused it. When my doctor came back on monday he gave me dilaudid for pain so I don't see how he would give me that if it was caused for the enzymes. I was just wondering if anyone knows the cause. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2003 Report Share Posted October 30, 2003 " " wrote: > I have cp and the 25 I was admitted to the hopital because my liver enzymes were elevated. The doctor who admitted me who was on call for my doctor wouldn't give me any pain medicine becuase she said the pain medicine caused it. When my doctor came back on monday he gave me dilaudid for pain so I don't see how he would give me that if it was caused for the enzymes. I was just wondering if anyone knows the cause. , There are some pain medications containing acetaminaphen and certain antibiotics that can cause high liver enzymes. There are many physical reasons for high liver readings, also. What pain medications or antibiotics had you previously taken, if any? Dilaudid is a hydrogenated form of morphine, and does not contain any acetaminaphen, so your doctor was correct in prescribing it. As I said, there could be many physical reasons for the high liver enzyme levels, fatty liver being only one. Is your doctor going to follow up on this to find out what caused it? I hope this helps answer your question in some fashion. With hope and prayers, Heidi Heidi H. Griffeth South Carolina SC & SE Regional Rep. PAI, Intl. Note: All comments or advice are personal opinion only, and should not be substituted for professional medical consultation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 1, 2003 Report Share Posted November 1, 2003 In addition to cp, I also have autoimmune hepatitis, so my history may be quite unique. I started back having attacks of acute panc in Jul 02, after about 18 months of no serious problems. After several months of the doctors not being able to figure out why my panc enzymes would come down pretty quickly when I was NPO, but liver enzymes did not, my old GI finally did a liver biopsy and found out that I have autoimmune hepatitis. I was put on prednisone in Jan 03 and within 2 1/2 weeks my liver enzymes were near normal. My old GI then blamed all my pain, nausea, and vomiting on the liver disease, despite the fact that several episodes included elevated amylase and lipase. Anyway, finally in Jun 03, I went under the care of a new GI/hepatologist and he told me that I have both autoimmune hepatitis and cp. I was having spikes in my liver enzymes when I had episodes of the lovely severe right upper quadrant pain. The doctors were blaming it all on my liver and said it couldn't be my panc because my amylase was normal. They didn't ever check my lipase because the local hospital has to send it out and it takes two days to get it back. It took going to the ER in the next town to finally put all the pieces together. My new GI/hep told me that my liver disease is pretty well under control with the meds and the spikes in my liver enzymes were being caused by my pancreas. I spent 11 days in the hospital the end of May/beginning of June on major pain meds and as my pancreas settled down, my liver enzymes came down to normal. I spent another 4 days in the hospital in mid-august again on major pain meds and once again as my panc settled down, the liver enzymes returned to normal. My GI is currently calling my cp idiopathic but he thinks it is caused in part by my bile not flowing as well as it should. He put me on actigall (to thin the bile) and panc enzymes as soon as he became my doc in early June. Overall I have been a lot better since then but I do still have pain, nausea, and vomiting on a pretty regular basis. Because I have liver disease, I am not given pain meds with tylenol any more. The doctors are careful in choosing all my meds since there are so many that are hard on the liver. My whole point to this is that according to my GI doc, pancreatitis can absolutely cause elevated liver enzymes and he feels sure that even though I have liver disease, many of my episodes of elevated liver enzymes were caused by my pancreas. For the doctor to automatically assume that pain meds caused your elevated liver enzymes is ridiculous in my opinion and for him to refuse to give you pain medicine was downright sadistic! If you just had a one time episode of elevated liver enzymes, there's probably not a lot to worry about. However, I would insist that the doctors keep a close watch on your liver enzymes for a few months. I can tell you about tons of people who just had elevated liver enzymes off and on and then by the time the doctors did a liver biopsy, they already had cirrhosis so advanced that they were put on a transplant list almost immediately. In the words of my rheumy, my liver enzymes were 'all over the place' for almost a year before they finally did a liver biopsy. They ranged anywhere from normal once or twice to over 20 times normal (700+ range). When my GI finally did the liver biopsy, my 'perfectly healthy' liver (that's what my old GI kept saying for 4 months after my internal med doc said I needed a liver biopsy) showed stage 3 fibrosis. Liver damage is graded on a scale of 0 to 4 with 0 being no damage and 4 being cirrhosis. My 'perfectly healthy' liver was well on its way to cirrhosis. Fortunately, autoimmune hepatitis typically responds well to treatment, which is steriods and immunosuppressants. However, without treatment, the 10 year survival rate for autoimmune hepatitis is only 10%! Okay, I'll get off my soap box now. By the way, autoimmune hepatitis is pretty rare - 1 in 100,000 to 150,000 depending on where you read. However, somebody has to be the 1 and there are lots of other liver diseases that are not so rare. By the way, I have never been a drinker despite the fact that I have cp and liver disease! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.