Treatment for alcoholic hepatitis involves quitting drinking as well as therapies to ease the symptoms of liver damage.
Quitting drinking
If you've been diagnosed with alcoholic hepatitis, you need to stop drinking alcohol and never drink alcohol again. It's the only way that might reverse liver damage or keep the disease from getting worse. People who don't stop drinking are likely to have some life-threatening health problems.
If you depend on alcohol and want to stop drinking, your healthcare professional can suggest a therapy that meets your needs. It can be harmful to stop drinking all at once. So discuss a plan with your healthcare professional.
Treatment might include:
- Medicines.
- Counseling.
- Alcoholics Anonymous or other support groups.
- Outpatient or live-in treatment program.
Treatment for malnutrition
Your healthcare professional might suggest a special diet to fix poor nutrition. You might be referred to an expert in diet to manage disease, called a dietitian. A dietitian can suggest ways to eat better to make up for the vitamins and nutrients you lack.
If you have trouble eating, your care professional might suggest a feeding tube. A tube is passed down the throat or through the side and into the stomach. A special nutrient-rich liquid diet is then passed through the tube.
Medicines to reduce liver swelling, called inflammation
These might help severe alcoholic hepatitis:
- Corticosteroids. These medicines might help some people with severe alcoholic hepatitis live longer. However, corticosteroids have serious side effects. They're not likely to be used if you have failing kidneys, stomach bleeding or an infection.
- Pentoxifylline. Your healthcare professional might suggest this medicine f you can't take corticosteroids. How well pentoxifylline works for alcoholic hepatitis isn't clear. Study results differ.
- Other treatment. N-acetylcysteine may help some people with alcoholic hepatitis. More study is needed.
Liver transplant
For many people with severe alcoholic hepatitis, the risk of dying is high without a liver transplant.
In the past, those with alcoholic hepatitis have not been given new livers. This is because of the risk that they'll continue drinking after transplant. But recent studies suggest that well-chosen people with severe alcoholic hepatitis have survival rates after a transplant similar to people with other types of liver disease who get liver transplants.
For transplant to be an option, you would need:
- To find a program that works with people who have alcoholic hepatitis.
- To follow the rules of the program. This includes making a promise not to drink alcohol for the rest of your life.