What Is Wilson Disease?
A genetic disorder of copper metabolism causing copper accumulation in liver and brain.
Why Do I Need Treatment?
To prevent liver failure, neurologic damage, and psychiatric symptoms.
How Should I Prepare?
- Blood tests: ceruloplasmin, copper level; 24-hour urinary copper.
- Eye exam: check for Kayser-Fleischer rings.
What Happens During Treatment?
- Copper chelation: penicillamine or trientine daily.
- Zinc acetate to block copper absorption.
- Low-copper diet: avoid shellfish, nuts, chocolate.
What Can I Expect Afterwards?
- Symptom stabilization and liver-function improvement in weeks to months.
- Lifelong therapy required.
Risks & Possible Complications
- Penicillamine side effects: rash, proteinuria
- Zinc overdose: gastric upset
Follow-Up
- Urinary copper and liver tests every 3–6 months.
Neurologic and ophthalmologic assessment.

