Alcoholic Liver Disease
CAUSES AND IMPACT
Causes, Incidence, Risk Factors, Impact
Alcohol use has been linked with liver disease mortality and increased social and economic costs (NCBI, 2014; Bruha et al., 2009). Most recent statistics say that disorders in alcohol consumption afflict millions of people worldwide. The incidence has been increasing along with increasing alcohol consumption. Alcohol liver disease takes the form of acute alcoholic hepatitis and chronic liver disease, such as steatosis, steatohepatitis, fibrosis and cirrhosis. Seriousness and prognosis depend on the amount consumed, the pattern of drinking and the length of time of consumption, the presence of liver inflammation, diet and nutritional and genetic disposition. While steatosis is virtually benign, morbidity and mortality are both high in liver cirrhosis. Survival rate for advanced cirrhosis is 1 to 2 years and 50% mortality risk for those with severe acute alcoholic hepatitis have as much as 50% mortality (NCBI, 2014). Long-term intake of more than 30 grams of absolute alcohol a day raises the risk of alcoholic liver disease or ALD. Liver disease is almost sure to develop from long-term consumption of more than 80 grams of absolute alcohol a day (Bruha et al.).
Alcohol liver disease or ALD or Alcohol-related disease or ARLD is damage to the liver by alcohol mis-use (NCBI, 2014). The symptoms do not manifest until the liver has been seriously damaged. I is the most complex organ in the body second only to the brain. It filters toxins from the blood, helps digest food, regulates blood sugar and cholesterol levels, and helps fight infection and disease. It is very resilient and can regenerate itself. But every alcohol consumption destroys some liver cells. While it can produce new cells to replace those that die, prolonged alcohol use for a number of years reduces its capabilities and soon damages it (NCBI).
The three stages of ARLD or ALD are alcoholic fatty liver disease, alcoholic hepatitis, and cirrhosis (NCBI, Bruha et al. 2009). Fatty liver disease can result from heavy drinking for even a few days. It is reversible and liver health can be restored if drinking is stopped for two weeks. Alcoholic infectious hepatitis results from continued alcohol over-consumption, which inflames the liver. Liver health can be restored if drinking is stopped permanently. Otherwise, it is a life-threatening illness. And cirrhosis is the last stage in which the liver is substantially scarred. It is generally irreversible but immediate cessation can reduce further damage and largely increase life expectancy. Otherwise, life expectancy is limited to at least 5 years at 50%. Complications are likely and life-threatening, including internal bleeding, increased toxins in the brain or encephalopathy, fluid accumulation in the abdomen or ascites linked to kidney failure, and liver cancer (NBCI, Bruha et al.).
Signs and Symptoms
ALD or ARLD produces conditions and associated symptoms (NHS, 2013). The symptoms do not appear until the liver has been seriously damaged. Early symptoms are malaise, weight loss, loss of appetite, jaundice or yellowing of the eyes and skin, swelling of the ankles and the abdomen, drowsiness or confusion, vomiting of blood or blood in the stools, and diarrhea. Advanced symptoms develop when the liver becomes more severely damaged. These include jaundice, edema or swelling of the extremities because of fluid build-up, ascites or build up of abdominal fluid, strong skin itch, hair loss, clubbed fingers, blotchy red palms, considerable weight loss, muscle wasting, weakness, confusion and memory disruption, insomnia, personality changes because of toxin build-up in the brain, vomiting of blood, black stools because of internal bleeding, frequent bruises and bleeding and increases sensitivity to alcohol and drugs. The last is the result of the failure of the liver to process alcohol and drugs (NHS).
Physical examination often reveals an enlarged and smooth but seldom tender liver (NHS, 2013). The signs of chronic liver disease, such as spider angiomas, ascites or asterixix, are likely absent. Symptoms may be non-specific and mild. These include loss of appetite and weight loss, painful or distended stomach, nausea or vomiting. Physical manifestations can include enlarged liver or hepatomegaly,...
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