How to recover from drug-induced liver injury

Drug-induced liver injury requires discontinuing the use and preventing further use of the drug that caused the liver injury. As a result of the use of certain drugs, the drug itself or its metabolites cause damage to the liver cells, causing liver injury, which needs to be treated by discontinuing the use or preventing further use of the suspected drug. Hepatoprotective therapy is also available, such as the use of drugs such as N-acetylcysteine, reduced glutathione, diammonium glycyrrhizinate, and polyene phosphatidylcholine, all of which need to be used under medical supervision. If it is more difficult to be corrected by conservative treatment, artificial liver treatment should be performed, and if liver failure occurs, liver transplantation should be performed. If you find drug-related liver injury, you need to go to the hospital in time, to clarify the cause of the disease, under the guidance of the doctor for standardized treatment, to avoid delaying the condition.