Advertisement Loading
▾ Continue Below ▾

Causes And Risk Factors Of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

A healthy liver contains a limited amount of fat. When fat accumulates to over five percent of the liver's weight, patients have a fatty liver. A fatty liver can induce an inflammatory response, which causes liver tissue damage. The body repairs this damage with scar tissue, which can progress to cirrhosis and cause the liver to fail. Symptoms of fatty liver disease typically do not manifest until late-stage liver scarring. Most cases are discovered with a routine blood test or when the liver appears abnormal on imaging tests conducted for other reasons. To confirm the diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, further blood tests, more imaging tests, and a liver biopsy may be performed. 

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease treatment focuses on preventing further liver damage and failure. Patients should engage in healthy weight loss to improve their liver health. This may include going on a sustainable weight loss diet. Individuals can also benefit from regular exercise as a treatment for fatty liver disease. Of course, they should understand the causes and risk factors as well and work to minimize them.

Advertisement Loading
▾ Continue Below ▾

Obesity

Dreamstime
Advertisement Loading
▾ Continue Below ▾

Their obesity can cause nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in an individual. Only ten to fifteen percent of individuals who have a healthy range body mass index have this disease. In contrast, seventy percent of those with a body mass index considered obese have nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. Excess fat is deemed the most prevalent proven cause of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in obese individuals. 

Individuals who are obese consume large amounts of fat, have a body that produces an excess amount of fat, or cannot metabolize fats very efficiently. When individuals consume more fat than their bodies require and can metabolize, the excess fats are put into liver cells for storage. More fat tissue in the liver due to obesity makes an individual more likely to have an adverse immune reaction to the extra fat, which can cause liver damage. Any mechanism that puts more fat in the body than what is needed can cause obesity and fat deposition in liver cells, resulting in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.

NEXT PAGE
Advertisement Loading
▾ Continue Below ▾
NEXT PAGE
Advertisement Loading
▾ Continue Below ▾
Advertisement Loading
▾ Continue Below ▾

MORE FROM HEALTHPREP

    Advertisement Loading
    ▾ Continue Below ▾
    Advertisement Loading
    ▾ Continue Below ▾
    Advertisement Loading
    ▾ Continue Below ▾
    Advertisement Loading
    ▾ Continue Below ▾
    Advertisement Loading
    ▾ Continue Below ▾