AUTOIMMUNE HEPATITIS IN THE INTERNAL MEDICINE CLINIC: PROBLEMS OF EARLY DIAGNOSIS AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Abstract
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a chronic and progressive inflammatory disease of unknown etiology, characterized by immune system-mediated damage to the liver parenchyma, hypergammaglobulinemia, and the appearance of tissue-specific autoantibodies. Today, a global increase in the prevalence of AIH is observed in internal medicine clinics. Because the disease often begins latently or with non-specific symptoms (asthenia, arthralgia, dyspepsia), patients present to a general practitioner or gastroenterologist late—at the stage of established liver cirrhosis. Therefore, early diagnosis and proper differential diagnosis at the primary healthcare level remain an urgent problem.
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