%0 Journal Article %T Updated Review on the Panorama of Liver Diseases in Benin %A Jean Sehonou %A Aboudou Ra£¿mi Kpossou %A Celia Rosemonde Ablavi Mouzouvi %A Comlan N¡¯d¨¦hougb¨¨a Martin Sokpon %A Rodolph Koffi Vignon %J Open Journal of Gastroenterology %P 33-42 %@ 2163-9469 %D 2023 %I Scientific Research Publishing %R 10.4236/ojgas.2023.131004 %X Introduction: The aim of this work was to take stock of the epidemiological aspects of liver diseases in Benin. Methods: Two methods were used: documentary research and collection of the position of gastroenterologists on the subject. For the literature search, the sources interviewed were Medline, African Journal On Line (AJOL), Google and Google scholar. Additional searches were made on the websites of European gastroenterology societies (AFEF, EASL). A collection of the opinions of gastroenterologists, most of them members of the Beninese Society of Hepato-gastroenterology was made. Results: From a nosological point of view, the most frequent and serious liver diseases in Benin are mainly infectious: viral hepatitis B and C (9.9% and 4.12% of the general population in 2013). Bacterial liver diseases (ascites fluid infections and tuberculosis of the liver) come in 3rd position after cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Amoebic abscesses of the liver tend to regress. The toxic causes are dominated, in addition to alcoholic liver diseases (steatosis, cirrhosis), by drug lesions: two fatal cases of hepatotoxicity by artesunate-amodiaquine combination and asymptomatic and transient cytolysis in 23.8% of 63 children less than 5 years old treated with arthemether-lumefantrine combination have been described. Phytotherapy, alone or in combination with modern drugs, can in some cases be hepatotoxic. Plants with recognized medicinal virtues (may be harmful to the liver (Senna, Moringa oleifera, tamarind). Chronic aflatoxicoses secondary to the consumption of contaminated food (maize, cassava or peanuts) are relatively under-documented. Overload diseases (in particular alcoholic or non-alcoholic fatty liver) are on the increase (3.19% of 662 ultrasounds in 1995 against 14.5% of 411 in 2011 in Cotonou) partly due to the demographic and nutritional transition underway in Benin. These diseases, often blamed on spells cast, lead to hospital deaths from cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma in young economically active subjects. Conclusion: Despite anti-infectious therapeutic advances, the prevention of toxic and metabolic hepatopathies is essential. Clinical research is crucial. %K Viral Hepatitis %K Drug-Induced Hepatitis %K Benin %K Viral Hepatitis %K Toxic Hepatitis %U http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=122539