Seminars in liver disease
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Seminars in liver disease · Nov 2008
ReviewRole of fatty acids in the pathogenesis of obesity and fatty liver: impact of bariatric surgery.
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) spans a spectrum from simple steatosis to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) to cirrhosis. Simple steatosis is the substrate upon which the more serious entities in the spectrum develop; it is the first "hit" in the multistep pathogenesis of NASH, which is considered the hepatic manifestation of the metabolic syndrome. Demonstration of the existence of regulatable fatty acid transport mechanisms has contributed to clarifying the role of fatty acid disposition in obesity, the various components of NAFLD, and the metabolic syndrome. ⋯ Dysregulation of fatty acid disposition, with ectopic lipid accumulation in other tissues, is a major contributing factor to other components of the metabolic syndrome. Bariatric surgery is an effective treatment for severe obesity, but its role in the management of the various forms of fatty liver disease is unclear. Our review of the literature that includes both initial and follow-up liver biopsies suggests that most obese patients with simple steatosis and NASH who undergo bariatric surgery will achieve improvement in hepatic histology, but that occasional patients, especially those who lose weight very rapidly, may show worsening of either fibrosis or steatohepatitis.