Overweight? What You Need To Know About Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
3/19/2020
Being overweight can have serious effects on several parts of your body, including your liver. Although your liver usually has a small amount of fat in it, too much can result in a condition known as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).
While this condition usually doesn’t cause symptoms, it can lead to more serious health problems. If you’re overweight, your risk of having NAFLD is higher. Understanding this disease and learning how to prevent it can help you keep your liver healthy.
Other causes of fatty liver include alcohol intake, diabetes, having high cholesterol, etc. When fatty liver was noticed in patients who did not have significant alcohol intake, it was named non-alcoholic fatty liver, to differentiate from the alcoholic fatty liver disease.
Causes of NAFLD
Although the underlying cause of NAFLD isn’t known, doctors do know how it occurs. This disease develops when your liver is unable to break fats down effectively, leading to higher amounts of it. NAFLD affects up to 25 percent of people in the US, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDKD).
Symptoms of Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
In most cases, this disease does not cause any symptoms. If it progresses, it can cause liver inflammation and scarring, known as non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). In the later stages of NASH, some people experience pain in their upper right abdomen, fatigue, and unexplained weight loss.
Potential Complications
Having a fatty liver can lead to NASH, which affects up to five percent of people in the US, according to NIDDKD. NASH is typically known as a silent disease, since it does not cause symptoms in the early stages. NASH can result in cirrhosis, or severe scarring of the liver, which prevents this organ from functioning properly. In the most serious cases, cirrhosis can lead to liver failure.
Risk Factors for NAFLD
Being overweight is one of the most common risk factors of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, which typically affects middle-aged people. Having other health conditions that are typically associated with an unhealthy diet, such as type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol and high triglyceride levels, can also raise your risk of developing fatty liver disease. Other risk factors include:
- Metabolic syndrome
- Polycystic ovary syndrome
- Sleep apnea
- Underactive thyroid or pituitary gland
- Eating healthy by including more fruits, vegetables and whole grains in your diet and reducing the amount of calories you eat
- Exercising for at least 30 minutes per day
- Managing diabetes
- Bringing high cholesterol and triglyceride levels down through healthy eating and medication, if necessary
- Avoiding alcohol
- Being careful about taking over-the-counter pain relievers and other medications that can affect your liver
- Seeing a healthcare provider who specializes in liver disease