Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND IMPORTANCE: Severe pre-eclampsia is a medical condition that affects women during the last two trimesters of pregnancy. Hemorrhagic hepatic infarction is a hepatic complication and is rarely encountered in women with severe pre-eclampsia. This case report aims to present the characteristics of hemorrhagic hepatic infarction in a pregnant woman with severe pre-eclampsia. CASE PRESENTATION: A 27-year-old pregnant woman with a 30-week gestation of amenorrhea was admitted with a blood pressure of 160/100 millimeters of Mercury (mmHg), headaches, dizziness, and oedema in the lower limbs. CLINICAL DISCUSSION: These complaints with clinical and paraclinical examinations led to the diagnosis of severe pre-eclampsia, and she underwent an emergency cesarean section, but 6 h later, she presented with hypovolemic shock, and this led to a new surgery. A surgery that made it possible to develop or discover a diffuse hepatic infarction with hemorrhagic infiltration of the gallbladder and the falciform ligament without active bleeding in the liver. Emergency management of pre-eclampsia was adopted, and the postoperative course was simple, with a good clinical outcome when the patient was discharged. CONCLUSION: Severe pre-eclampsia and hemorrhagic hepatic infarction are complications of pregnancy, which require emergency treatment, and above all, these medical conditions require the termination of the pregnancy.