People with type 2 diabetes are at
greater risk of serious liver disease than those without the condition,
research has shown.
Researchers warn that hospital
admissions and deaths caused by liver disease are likely to rise if cases of
type 2 diabetes continue to increase at current rates.
The team examined cases of liver
diseases among people with diabetes from anonymized, securely linked
hospital records and death records in Scotland over a ten year period.
They found that most cases of liver
disease in people with type 2 diabetes are not alcohol-related but caused by a
build-up of fat within liver cells - a condition known as non-alcoholic
fatty liver disease or NAFLD.
NAFLD is commonly linked to obesity,
which is also a risk factor for type 2 diabetes. Most people can avoid getting
these conditions by following a healthy diet and taking regular exercise.
The research team - led by the
Universities of Edinburgh and Southampton - found that men with type 2 diabetes
are three times more likely to suffer from NAFLD than men without diabetes.
There are fewer cases of type 2
diabetes and liver disease amongst women but having type 2 diabetes increases
the risk of NAFLD by five times, the study found.
People with NAFLD are more
susceptible to the effects of alcohol on the liver and should avoid drinking to
avoid further complications, the researchers say.
Treatment options for NAFLD - which
increases the risk of life-threatening complications such as cirrhosis and liver
cancer - are limited.
The study involved researchers from
the Scottish and Southampton Diabetes and Liver Disease Group. It is published
in the Journal of Hepatology and was funded by the Scottish Government through
the Scottish Diabetes Group.
Professor Sarah Wild, of the
University of Edinburgh's Usher Institute for Population Health Sciences, said:
"Preventing non-alcoholic fatty liver disease by avoiding unhealthy
lifestyles in both people with and without diabetes is important because it is
difficult to treat the complications of this condition."
Professor Chris Byrne of the
University of Southampton and University Hospital Southampton's, NIHR
Biomedical Research Centre said: "We have shown for the first time that
type 2 diabetes is an important novel risk factor that increases numbers of hospital admissions and deaths, in people with
all common chronic liver diseases. Further research is now
needed to determine whether all patients with type 2 diabetes should be
screened for common chronic liver diseases."
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-04-liver-disease-diabetes.html
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