Authors
Nikos Adamidis, Sofia Adamidi, Vasiliki E Georgakopoulou, Sofia Miliou, Argyroula Karampela, Epameinondas Stratopoulos, Theodora Margariti, Georgios Sakizlis, Sotirios Adamidis
Published in
Cureus. Volume 18. Issue 5. Pages e109572. Epub May 24, 2026.
Abstract
Herb-induced liver injury can present with nonspecific symptoms and may be difficult to recognize when herbal exposure is not initially disclosed. A 60-year-old female patient presented with jaundice and scleral icterus, nausea, anorexia, and fatigue after recent initiation of a herbal preparation identified as Chelidonium majus, commonly known as greater celandine. Clinical examination revealed icterus. Initial laboratory testing showed aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, total bilirubin, direct bilirubin, and international normalized ratio at pathologically high levels. Viral hepatitis was excluded. Overall, the findings of the autoimmune evaluation did not support a definitive diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis. Magnetic resonance imaging/magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography and abdominal ultrasonography showed no biliary obstruction or focal hepatic lesion. Liver biopsy demonstrated an acute hepatitis-like pattern with portal inflammation, ductular reaction, centrilobular necrosis, apoptotic hepatocytes, ceroid-laden macrophages, giant-cell hepatocyte transformation, and mild non-bridging fibrosis. The suspected herbal product was discontinued, and the patient received supportive treatment with progressive biochemical improvement. This case supports the need to consider herbal preparations in the diagnostic evaluation of acute hepatitis, particularly when common viral, autoimmune, and obstructive causes have been excluded.
PMID:
42359199
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 26 Jun 2026.
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