Liver failure is the severe decline of liver function. It is an uncommon but serious condition that occurs when the liver is impaired and can no longer perform important tasks like clearing toxins from the blood or producing bile, a substance that helps digest food.
Liver failure can affect infants, toddlers, older children, and adolescents.
There are two kinds of liver failure: acute liver failure and chronic liver failure.
Acute liver failure, also called fulminant hepatic failure, is the rapid loss of liver function over the course of days or weeks in a child who has no previous history of liver disease. Acute liver failure is a medical emergency that requires immediate medical attention.
The most common cause of acute liver failure in children is a toxin or virus that damages the liver.
Chronic liver failure, also known as end-stage liver disease, develops over a period of months or years as the result of damage caused by long-term liver disease such as biliary atresia, metabolic liver disease, hepatitis B or hepatitis C, or cirrhosis.
Without medical attention, a child with liver failure will become confused and disoriented, a condition known as encephalopathy.
Most children with acute or chronic liver failure will need a liver transplant. In a small number of cases of liver failure, 15 percent to 20 percent, the liver repairs itself spontaneously.