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Non alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)

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Title: Non alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)


1
Non alcoholic steatohepatitis(NASH)
  • Raika Jamali M.D.
  • Gastroenterologist and hepatologist
  • Tehran University of Medical Sciences

2
Steatohepatitis
  • Is an intermediate stage in the spectrum of non
    alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD),
  • Simple fatty liver --gt Steatohepatitis --gt
    Cirrhosis
  • Shows the same histopathology but occurs in the
    absence of excess alcohol consumption (lt20 gr/day)

3
  • Associated with the metabolic syndrome
    (insulin-resistant state)
  • Truncal obesity,
  • Type 2 DM,
  • Hypertension
  • Dyslipidemia (high TG and low HDL levels).
  • Though strongly associated with obesity, NASH has
    also been demonstrated in 3 of lean individuals
    (generalized lipodystrophy)

4
Epidemiology
  • The prevalence varies based on the diagnostic
    test used
  • Population-based surveys of adults gt18 y with US
    have demonstrated fatty liver disease in 20 of
    the populations of Japan, Western Europe, and the
    US
  • MRI 34 in the general population gt18 y
  • Hispanic Americans (50), Whites (33), African
    Americans (25) have fatty livers

5
  • 80 of individuals with steatosis by MRI have
    normal ALT levels,
  • Indicating that blood tests are the least
    sensitive tool for diagnosis
  • Prevalence of fatty liver disease falls to 8 if
    elevations in ALT are used for screening

6
  • NASH is the main cause of elevated liver enzymes
    in the Western world
  • The true prevalence of NASH is unknown
  • because neither imaging tests nor blood tests
    reliably differentiate steatosis from more
    advanced stages of fatty liver disease (NASH and
    cirrhosis)
  • and because liver biopsy studies show that NASH
    or cirrhosis sometimes occurs in individuals with
    normal ALT levels,

7
  • Liver biopsy studies suggest
  • Steatosis is twice as common as NASH
  • at least 10 of patients with NASH progress to
    cirrhosis over time
  • in the adult U.S. population
  • Fatty liver (34)
  • Steatohepatitis (17)
  • Cirrhosis (2)

8
  • The prevalence of NAFLD in Iran was
  • 2.04 in a population based study in Golestan
    province. (2006)
  • 2.1 in autopsies from forensic medicine of
    Tehran. (2006)
  • 2.35 in healthy blood donors in Tehran. (2005)

9
Pathobiology
  • In the early stages of non alcoholic fatty liver
    disease (NAFLD), fat accumulates within
    hepatocytes when mechanisms that promote lipid
    removal (by oxidation or export) cannot keep pace
    with mechanisms that promote lipid import or
    biosynthesis.
  • Although alcohol consumption has long been known
    to promote lipid biosynthesis while inhibiting
    lipid export, it has been appreciated only
    recently that the molecular mechanisms involved
    are very similar to those that promote steatosis
    in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.

10
  • Factors that modulate the evolution of NAFLD
  • Fatty acids
  • Tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-a)
  • Adiponectin
  • Fatty acids routinely traffic between the liver
    and adipose tissue.
  • Fat and the liver are also important sources of
    TNF-a and adiponectin.
  • Adiponectin reduces lipid accumulation within
    hepatocytes
  • by inhibiting fatty acid import and increasing
    fatty acid oxidation and export.
  • It is also a potent insulin-sensitizing agent.

11
  • TNF-a antagonizes the actions of diponectin
  • promotes hepatocyte steatosis
  • increases mitochondrial generation of reactive
    oxygen species, which induce insulin resistance.
  • promotes hepatocyte apoptosis and recruits
    inflammatory cells to the liver.
  • generates oxidative and apoptotic stress that
    sometimes overwhelms antioxidant and
    antiapoptotic defenses and leads to
    steatohepatitis.
  • Thus the relative risk for the development of
    NASH correlates with increases in TNF-a or
    decreases in adiponectin levels

12
Fatty acids within hepatocytes
Inhibitor ? kinase-ß
Nuclear transcription factor NF?B
TNF-a and IL-6
insulin resistance
  • Therefore, like adipose tissue, fatty livers also
    make soluble factors that circulate to distant
    tissues and contribute to systemic insulin
    resistance (the metabolic syndrome).

13
  • NASH can develop in nonobese individuals.
  • The mechanism of liver damage in nonobese and
    obese individuals may be similar
  • excessive exposure of hepatocytes to fatty acids
  • fatty acidinducible inflamma-tory mediators
    (TNF-a)
  • reactive oxygen species.
  • Intestinal microflora help regulate intestinal
    uptake of diet-derived lipids, in addition to
    hepatic fatty acid synthesis,
  • the gut bacteria of some nonobese individuals
    might promote excessive hepatic accumulation of
    fatty acids, as well as exposure to other
    bacterial factors (e.g., lipopolysaccharide) that
    trigger hepatic TNF production

14
  • The role of intestinal flora in the pathogenesis
    of alcohol-induced fatty liver disease has been
    well demonstrated
  • Experimental animals housed under germ-free
    conditions or treated with poorly absorbed oral
    antibiotics are protected from alcohol-induced
    hepatotoxicity.
  • Products from intestinal bacteria are thought to
    injure the liver by increasing hepatic production
    of TNF-a and reactive oxygen species
  • because mice that are genetically deficient in
    either TNF-a or certain enzyme that generate
    reactive oxygen species are also protected from
    the alcoholic liver damage

15
  • Progression from fatty liver disease to cirrhosis
    is predominately dictated by the severity of
    oxidant stress and the consequent
    necro-inflammation.
  • However, findings in animal models of
    steatohepatitis cast some doubt on this
    assumption because mice in which severe
    steatohepatitis develops do not uniformly
    progress to cirrhosis
  • In fact, progression to cirrhosis is also poorly
    predicted by the gravity of the injurious insult
    in human fatty liver disease
  • For example, although there is no doubt that
    alcohol is hepatotoxic, most lifelong heavy
    drinkers do not become cirrhotic
  • Similarly, although obesity clearly increases
    exposure to fat-derived inflammatory mediators
    and is an independent risk factor for progression
    of alcoholic fatty liver disease to cirrhosis,
    some morbidly obese individuals have normal
    livers at the time of gastric bypass surgery

16
  • Individuals in whom just steatosis develops
    despite constant bombardment with inflammatory
    factors might be better at repairing their liver
    damage without the development of fibrosis than
    those in whom NASH or cirrhosis develops.
  • In this regard, leptin, angiotensin, and
    norepinephrine
  • promote the proliferation of hepatic stellate
    cells
  • upregulate their expression of profibrogenic
    cytokines (TGF ß)
  • induce collagen gene expression.
  • Conversely, adiponectin appears to inhibit the
    activation of hepatic stellate cells and decrease
    liver fibrosis.
  • Angiotensin is an independent risk factor for
    advanced liver fibrosis in NASH and the
    suggestion,that angiotensin receptor blockade
    might decrease liver fibrosis and slow disease
    progression in patients with NASH and arterial
    hypertension.

17
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18
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