1Demonstrator, Upgraded Dept. of Forensic and State Medicine, Medical College, Kolkata, West Bengal. E-mail: banerjee.chandan09@gmail.com
2Demonstrator, Dept of Pathology, NRS Medical College, Kolkata, West Bengal
3Assoc. Prof, Dept of Pathology, NRS Medical College, Kolkata, West Bengal
4Assoc. Prof & HOD, Dept of Forensic and State Medicine, Murshidabad Medical College, Berhampur, Murshidabad, West Bengal, 742101
5Post Graduate Trainee, NRS Medical College, Kolkata, West Bengal
6Prof & HOD, Upgraded Dept of Forensic and State Medicine, Medical College, Kolkata, West Bengal
Online published on 30 August, 2014.
Hepatic Encephalopathy is a serious and fatal complication of chronic liver disease and is broadly defined as an alteration in mental status and cognitive functions occurring in presence of liver failure. The diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy is mainly clinical, sometimes aided by relevant laboratory (biochemical) investigations-if the infrastructural facilities permit. Histopathological findings in the brain and other organs are either meager or absent. Hydatid disease is caused by ingestion of eggs of Echinococcus species. Human beings are accidental intermediate hosts. Two third of hydatid cysts are found in liver. Though obstructive jaundice occurs as a complication of this cestode infestation, encephalopathy is rare or does not happen. The determination of the definitive cause of death may depend on elucidating the histological features of non apparent or equivocal macroscopic lesions. In this case presentation it has been attempted, to illustrate a rare postmortem finding of hydatid disease in a clinical presentation of hepatic encephalopathy where post-mortem histopathological examination shows multi-organ ischemic necrosis.
Hepatic Encephalopathy, Hydatid Disease, Autopsy, Histopathology, Multi-organ failure