Did you know.... Women are more prone to liver damage from drinking alcohol than men? If you must drink…
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What is alcohol-induced liver disease and what are its symptoms? |
Fatty liver is excessive accumulation of fat inside the liver cells. This is the most common alcohol-induced liver disorder. The liver is enlarged, causing upper abdominal discomfort on the right side.
Alcoholic hepatitis is an acute inflammation of the liver, accompanied by the destruction of individual liver cells and scarring. Symptoms may include fever, jaundice, an increased white blood cell count, an enlarged, tender liver, and spider-like veins in the skin.
Alcoholic cirrhosis is the destruction of normal liver tissue, leaving non-functioning scar tissue. Symptoms may include those of alcoholic hepatitis, in addition to portal hypertension (leading to blood vomiting), enlarged spleen, ascites, excessive bleeding (due to poor clotting), kidney failure, confusion, or liver cancer.
How is alcohol-induced liver disease diagnosed? |
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Medical history: Anyone with the above symptoms -
History of alcoholism: consumption of more than 20 units a week (one unit is one bottle of beer or a glass of wine or a peg of whisky) of alcohol for more than 10 years -
Laboratory tests such as prothrombin time -
Liver function tests - a series of blood tests to determine if the liver is functioning properly. -
Liver biopsy - a procedure in which tissue samples from the liver are removed (with a needle or during surgery) from the body for examination under a microscope.
reatment for alcohol-induced liver disease |
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