How is toxic hepatitis treated?

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Every disease seems to have its taboo aspects, but the impact on our lives is very big. Especially toxic hepatitis, there are many dietary taboos, which can not be ignored. After all, people have to eat a certain amount of food every day to supplement their own energy, so we must pay attention to the dietary taboos. Let's talk about how to treat toxic hepatitis?.

How is toxic hepatitis treated?

First, individualized treatment of severe hepatitis. Because different patients may have different chronic liver diseases, we should grasp the main contradiction and carry out targeted treatment.

Second: early diagnosis, early treatment of severe hepatitis. Patients with liver disease in the early onset of symptoms of severe hepatitis, such as severe gastrointestinal symptoms, and progressive deepening, at this time active treatment, the effect is better, and when there is obvious biochemical indicators of liver failure, the same treatment of severe hepatitis, the effect may be very little. Whether liver failure can be reversed or not depends on the number of living hepatocytes and their regeneration ability. If the hepatocytes are completely necrotic, that is to say, the basis of regeneration is lost, any treatment is difficult to reverse. Therefore, the treatment of early severe hepatitis is of great significance to the prognosis.

Third: due to the rapid progress of severe liver disease, we can not wait as much as common diseases. If signs of infection are found, powerful and broad-spectrum antibiotics should be used earlier, and it is not necessary to wait until the clinical treatment of severe hepatitis is very obvious; To ensure the effective blood volume, so as to avoid the occurrence of renal failure. The treatment of predictive severe hepatitis can prevent various organ functions from being affected one by one and the occurrence of vicious circle, and win time for the repair of liver cells.

matters needing attention

Patients eat more vegetables and fruits to supplement enough vitamins and cellulose, which also helps to promote digestive function. Liver dysfunction often affects fat metabolism, so many patients with chronic hepatitis have fatty liver after hepatitis. Therefore, the diet should be low-fat, low sugar (too much sugar into the body is easy to convert into fat), high protein. High protein diet should include plant and animal protein, such as bean products, beef, chicken, fish, etc., and animal and plant protein should be matched in half. After digestion, the ingested protein is broken down into amino acids for absorption, and then it is made into the most important muscle and blood protein in the liver.