| Literature DB >> 30551665 |
Renata Alfani1,2, Edoardo Vassallo3,4, Anna Giulia De Anseris5, Lucia Nazzaro6, Ida D'Acunzo7,8, Carolina Porfito9,10, Claudia Mandato11, Pietro Vajro12,13,14,15.
Abstract
Obesity-related non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) represents the most common cause of pediatric liver disease due to overweight/obesity large-scale epidemics. In clinical practice, diagnosis is usually based on clinical features, blood tests, and liver imaging. Here, we underline the need to make a correct differential diagnosis for a number of genetic, metabolic, gastrointestinal, nutritional, endocrine, muscular, and systemic disorders, and for iatrogenic/viral/autoimmune hepatitis as well. This is all the more important for patients who are not in the NAFLD classical age range and for those for whom a satisfactory response of liver test abnormalities to weight loss after dietary counseling and physical activity measures cannot be obtained or verified due to poor compliance. A correct diagnosis may be life-saving, as some of these conditions which appear similar to NAFLD have a specific therapy. In this study, the characteristics of the main conditions which require consideration are summarized, and a practical diagnostic algorithm is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: NAFLD; differential diagnosis; fatty liver; genetic and metabolic disorders; obesity; systemic disorders
Year: 2018 PMID: 30551665 PMCID: PMC6306738 DOI: 10.3390/children5120169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Figure 1Algorithm for differential diagnosis of fatty liver disease in children.
Fatty liver etiologies to be considered against a diagnosis of pediatric non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)/non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH).
| Gastrointestinal/Nutritional/ | Genetic and Metabolic Causes | Toxics and Drugs |
|---|---|---|
| Celiac disease | α- and β-oxidation defects | Cocaine |
| Inflammatory bowel disease | Abeta or hypobetalipoproteinemia | Ecstasy |
| Anorexia nervosa | Cholesterol ester storage disease | Ethanol |
| Obesity | Citrin deficiency | Pesticides |
| Severe malnutrition | Cystic fibrosis | Solvents |
| Diabetes mellitus type 1 | Glycogen storage disease | Amiodarone |
| Hypothalamic-pituitary disorders | Hereditary fructose intolerance | Antiretroviral drugs |
| Hypothyroidism | Mitochondrial and peroxisomal defects | Aspirin |
| Polycystic ovary syndrome | Shwachman-Diamond syndrome | Glucocorticoids |
| Autoimmune hepatitis | Turner syndrome | Methotrexate |
| Viral hepatitis | Urea cycle disorders | Sodium valproate |
| Wilson’s disease | Tetracycline |
Laboratory workup in children with fatty liver.
| 1st Step | 2nd Step |
|---|---|
| Blood counts and standard liver function tests (AST, ALT, GGT, coagulation, bilirubin, total protein and electrophoresis, total Ig) | Clinically oriented hormonal tests (e.g. cortisol) |
| Lipid profile, glucose, insulin (eventually OGTT) | Serum copper, 24h urinary copper |
| FT3, FT4,TSH | Sweat test/molecular test for CFTR |
| EMA, tTgasiIgA | AMA, SMA, LKM, LC1 |
| Viral markers (HBV, HCV) | A1-antitrypsin |
| Ceruloplasmin | Amino and organic acids, acyl carnitine profile, serum lactate, ammonium, CDG and LAL test, urinary reducing substances |
The abbreviations used above areALT: Alanine aminotransferase;AMA: Anti-mitochondrial antibodies;AST: Aspartate aminotransferase;CDG: Congenital disorders of glycosylation; CFTR: Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; EMA: Anti-endomysial antibodies; FT3: Free T3; FT4: Free T4; GGT: Gamma-glutamyl transferase; HBV: Hepatitis B virus; HCV: Hepatitis C virus; Ig: Immunoglobulin; LAL: Lyposomal acid lipase; LC1: Anti-liver cytosol antibodies;LKM: Anti-liver-kidney microsomal antibodies; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; SMA: Anti-smooth muscle antibodies; TSH: Thyroid-stimulating hormone; tTgasi: tissue Transglutaminase.