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Fatty liver disease (NAFLD), metabolic syndrome, and perhaps vitamin D – June 2013

What about non-alcoholic fatty liver disease as a new criterion to define metabolic syndrome?

World J Gastroenterol. 2013 June 14; 19(22): 3375-3384.
Giovanni Tarantino tarantin at unina.it and Carmine Finelli.
Giovanni Tarantino, Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University Medical School of Naples, 80131 Naples, Italy
Giovanni Tarantino, Fondazione Pascale, Cancer Research Center of Mercogliano, 83013 Mercogliano, Italy
Carmine Finelli, Center of Obesity and Eating Disorders, Stella Maris Mediterraneum Foundation, Chiaromonte, 80035 Potenza, Italy

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is currently not a component of the diagnostic criteria for metabolic syndrome (MetS); however, the development of NAFLD has some common mechanisms with the development of MetS, as they share the pathophysiologic basis of insulin resistance. It is also recognized that NAFLD is the hepatic manifestation of MetS. To define MetS, the presence of at least three of the proposed criteria is required, and sometimes it is sufficient to have only one laboratory value, modified by diet or drugs, for the classification of MetS. Ultrasonographically-detected NAFLD (US-NAFLD) is more stable, only changing during the middle- to long-term. Although controversies over MetS continue, and considering that abdominal ultrasonography for diagnosing NAFLD has high specificity and guidelines to modify the natural course of NAFLD by diet composition or lifestyle have not yet been established, why should we not introduce US-NAFLD as a new criterion to define MetS?
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See also VitaminDWiki

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2598 N2.jpg admin 20 Jun, 2013 34.49 Kb 5514
2597 N1.jpg admin 20 Jun, 2013 33.89 Kb 5059
2596 NAFLD and Metabolic Syndrome.pdf admin 20 Jun, 2013 985.89 Kb 1457