Kanel G C, Ucci A A, Kaplan M M, Wolfe H J
Am J Clin Pathol. 1980 Feb;73(2):235-9. doi: 10.1093/ajcp/73.2.235.
Hepatic morphologic changes in seven patients in heart failure who were initially thought to have hepatitis are reported. In each instance, percutaneous liver biopsy or post mortem tissue examination disclosed a striking lesion involving all perivenular areas, with replacement of hepatocytes by erythrocytes. Four patients were in pure left-heart failure, while three were in biventricular failure. Upon treatment of the heart failure, the conditions of all patients improved clinically, and liver-function tests returned to normal or near normal. In two patients who later had refractory heart failure and died, there was no evidence of hepatic-vein thrombosis or occlusion post-mortem. A hypothesis is offered for the pathogenesis of this lesion, and its clinico-pathologic differential is discussed.