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Chronic liver inflammation: Clinical implications beyond alcoholic liver disease
Authors:Byoung-Jin Park  Yong-Jae Lee  Hye-Ree Lee
Affiliation:Byoung-Jin Park, Department of Family Medicine, CHA University School of Medicine, Seoul 135-720, South KoreaYong-Jae Lee, Hye-Ree Lee, Department of Family Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul 135-720, South Korea
Abstract:Chronic alcohol exposure can lead to alcoholic liver disease, including hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, and chronic inflammation can simultaneously cause systemic medical illness. Recent evidence suggests that alcoholic liver disease is a predictor for liver-related diseases, cardiovascular disease, immunologic disease, and bone disease. Chronic inflammation in alcoholic liver disease is mediated by a direct inflammatory cascade from the alcohol detoxification process and an indirect inflammatory cascade in response to gut microflora-derived lipopolysaccharides (LPS). The pathophysiology of alcoholic liver disease and its related systemic illness is characterized by oxidative stress, activation of the immune cascade, and gut-liver interactions. Integrative therapeutic strategies for alcoholic liver disease include abstaining from alcohol consumption; general anti-inflammatories such as glucocorticoid, pentoxifylline, and tumour necrosis factor-α antagonist; antioxidants such as N- acetylcysteine; gut microflora and LPS modulators such as rifaximin and/or probiotics. This review focuses on the impact of chronic liver inflammation on systemic health problems and several potential therapeutic targets.
Keywords:Alcoholic liver disease   Oxidative stress   Cardiovascular disease   Immunologic disease   Bone disease
点击此处可从《World journal of gastroenterology : WJG》浏览原始摘要信息
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