Hepatotoxicity (from hepatic toxicity) is chemical-driven liver damage. Chemicals that cause liver damage are called hepatoxins. It is a possible side-effect of certain medications, but can also be caused by chemicals used in laboratories and industry, and natural chemicals, like microcystins.
Drugs or toxins that have a symptomatic hepatotoxicity are those that have predictable dose-response curves (higher concentrations cause more liver damage) and well characterized mechanisms of toxicity.
In contrast, idiosyncratic hepatotoxins are agents that cause liver damage in only a small fraction of the population that is exposed to the agent, does not have a clear dose-response or temporal relationship, and most often do not have predictive models. Idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity has led to the withdrawal of several drugs from market even after rigorous clinical testing as part of the FDA approval process - Rezulin®(troglitazone), Ranitidine (Zantac®), and trovafloxacin (Trovan®) are three prime examples of idiosyncratic hepatotoxins. The development of ximelagatran (Exanta®) was discontinued for concerns of liver damage.
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