AI Article Synopsis

  • Steatosis is the most prevalent liver disease and significantly affects health, particularly among non-obese individuals, with a study showing a 42.86% prevalence of steatosis in this group.
  • The study analyzed blood parameters and dietary habits of 987 non-obese participants and found significant differences, particularly higher consumption of red and processed meats and alcohol in those with liver disease.
  • Despite some differences in health markers, the overall dietary habits of non-obese individuals with and without steatosis were similar, suggesting that factors beyond diet, like genetic and hormonal influences, play a critical role in liver health.

Article Abstract

Background: Steatosis is the most common liver disease worldwide and the leading cause of liver-associated morbidity and mortality. The aim of this study was to explore the differences in blood parameters and dietary habits in non-obese patients with and without steatosis.

Methods: The present study included 987 participants with BMI < 30, assessed in the fourth recall of the MICOL study. Patients were divided by steatosis grade, and a validated food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) with 28 food groups was administered.

Results: The prevalence of non-obese participants with steatosis was 42.86%. Overall, the results indicated many statistically significant blood parameters and dietary habits. Analysis of dietary habits revealed that non-obese people with or without steatosis had similar dietary habits, although higher daily amounts of red meat, processed meat, ready meals, and alcohol were recorded in participants with liver disease ( < 0.05).

Conclusions: Many differences were found in non-obese people with and without steatosis, but in light of a network analysis, the two groups demonstrated similar dietary habits, proving that pathophysiological, genetic, and hormonal patterns are probably the basis of their liver status, regardless of weight. Future genetic analyses will be performed to analyze the expression of genes involved in the development of steatosis in our cohort.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10301509PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15122713DOI Listing

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