Literature DB >> 3319904

Fatty liver disease in morbid obesity.

D J Clain1, J H Lefkowitch.   

Abstract

About 90 per cent of morbidly obese patients show histological abnormalities of the liver. One third of patients have fatty change involving more than 50 per cent of hepatocytes. Fatty liver disease can be divided into four histological groups: Fatty liver, fatty hepatitis, fatty liver with portal fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Most patients show only fatty change. Alcohol, drugs, diabetes, poor nutrition, and weight-reducing surgery contribute to progressive liver damage, but morbid obesity alone may lead to severe disease showing all the features of alcoholic hepatitis and may end in cirrhosis and liver failure. The accumulation of fat alone is unlikely to be the stimulus to inflammation and fibrosis. Only one fifth of patients have complaints that arise from the liver. The development of severe fatty liver disease may also be asymptomatic and rarely shows the florid picture associated with alcoholic hepatitis. There is poor correlation of liver function test results with morphology in obesity. ALT levels exceeding twice the normal limit have some predictive value for histological grades of severity, but they are present in few patients. Pericentral and pericellular fibrosis in prebypass liver biopsies may be an important prognostic lesion for the development of fatty hepatitis and cirrhosis. In contrast with the frequent progression to massive fatty change, inflammation and fibrosis after bypass surgery, weight loss by low-calorie dieting, or starvation is accompanied by improvement in fatty change and return of liver function tests to normal.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1987        PMID: 3319904

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterol Clin North Am        ISSN: 0889-8553            Impact factor:   3.806


  13 in total

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3.  Fatty infiltration of liver in hyperlipidemic patients.

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Review 5.  Transitions of histopathologic criteria for diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease during the last three decades.

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Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2014-12-27

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8.  Laparoscopic bariatric surgery: what else are we uncovering? Liver pathology and preoperative indicators of advanced liver disease in morbidly obese patients.

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Review 10.  Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: Lipids and Insulin Resistance.

Authors:  Paul D Berk; Elizabeth C Verna
Journal:  Clin Liver Dis       Date:  2016-02-18       Impact factor: 6.126

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