Fatty Liver:
Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD)
and
Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH)
Medical Author: Michel Mendler, M.D.
Medical Editor:
Leslie J. Schoenfield, M.D.,
Ph.D.
What are Fatty Liver, NAFLD, and NASH?
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)
refers to a wide spectrum of liver disease ranging from simple fatty liver
(steatosis), to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), to cirrhosis (irreversible,
advanced scarring of the liver). All of the stages of NAFLD have in common the
accumulation of fat (fatty infiltration) in the liver cells (hepatocytes). In
NASH, the fat accumulation is associated with varying degrees of inflammation
(hepatitis) and scarring (fibrosis) of the liver.
The term nonalcoholic is used because NAFLD and NASH occur in individuals who
do not consume excessive amounts of alcohol. Yet, in many respects, the
histological picture of NAFLD (when we look at a biopsy piece of liver under the
microscope) is similar to what can be seen in liver disease that is due to
excessive intake of alcohol. As we shall see, however, the clinical
circumstances in NAFLD and NASH are very different from those in alcoholic liver
disease (ALD).
What is the NAFLD spectrum?
The NAFLD spectrum is thought to begin with and
progress from its simplest stage, called simple fatty liver (steatosis). That
is, fatty liver is the initial abnormality in the spectrum of NAFLD. Simple
fatty liver involves just the accumulation of fat in the liver cells with no
inflammation or scarring. The fat is actually composed of a particular type of
fat (triglyceride) that accumulates in tiny sacs within the liver cells. This
accumulation of fat in liver cells is not the same as the fat cells (adipocytes)
that constitute our body fat. Fatty liver is a harmless (benign) condition,
which means that it, by itself, does not cause any significant liver damage.
The next stage and degree of severity in the NAFLD spectrum is NASH.
Fortunately, only a fraction of patients with simple fatty liver will develop
NASH. As mentioned, NASH involves the accumulation of fat in the liver cells as
well as inflammation of the liver. The inflammatory cells can destroy the liver
cells (hepatocellular necrosis). In the terms "steatohepatitis" and "steatonecrosis",
steato refers to fatty infiltration, hepatitis refers to inflammation in the
liver, and necrosis refers to destroyed liver cells. Strong evidence suggests
that NASH, in contrast to simple fatty liver, is not a harmless condition. This
means that NASH can ultimately lead to scarring of the liver (fibrosis) and then
irreversible, advanced scarring (cirrhosis). Cirrhosis that is caused by NASH is
the last and most severe stage in the NAFLD spectrum.
Much is not yet known about NASH and NAFLD. For example, as discussed below,
the progression from each of the different stages of NAFLD is not well
understood. Moreover, even liver specialists still do not agree on the exact
microscopic definition of NASH. Nevertheless, individuals who develop any of the
three stages of NAFLD (fatty liver, NASH, or cirrhosis) share common risk
factors. Accordingly, fatty liver and NASH are described in this article as part
of the spectrum of NAFLD. Remember, NAFLD refers to the entire spectrum
beginning with fatty liver, progressing through NASH, and ending with cirrhosis.
NASH is that stage of the spectrum that involves fat accumulation (steatosis),
inflammation (hepatitis), and scarring (fibrosis) in the liver.
Next: Are there other causes of fat accumulation in the liver? »
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