Association between Dietary Pattern, Nutritional Status, Metabolic Factors, and Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

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Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) can be harmful to the body to varying degrees, and over a prolonged period, patients may develop steatotic cirrhosis or even develop liver cancer based on cirrhosis. Moreover, its harms are related to its severity. Patients with severe steatosis develop hepatocyte destruction, transaminase abnormalities, and long-term progression to steatotic cirrhosis, or even liver cancer, which should be treated aggressively. In order to provide theoretical basis for the prevention and early intervention of NAFLD, we analysis the relationship between nonalcoholic fatty liver disease(NAFLD) and dietary pattern, nutritional status, metabolic factor A total of 517 participants (200 males and 317 females) recruited in this study were gained from the health check center of The Ningbo Seventh Hospital, Ningbo, China, from September 2018 to August 2019. Patients diagnosed with NAFLD were selected as the study subjects. The data on the dietary pattern, nutritional status, and metabolic factors were collected for further analysis. A total of 517 eligible participants (317 females and 200 males) were involved in this study, with a mean age of 54.7 ± 16.7 years. Dessert and fruit diet, healthy dietary pattern, animal food dietary pattern, high salt diet mode, triglyceride, uric acid, adiponectin, and waist-hip ratio were significantly different between the two groups (P<0.05). Dietary patterns, nutritional status, metabolic factors, and NAFLD are correlated. Furthermore, applying this correlation law can better manage NAFLD patients.

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Xing, G., Huang, Y., & Liu, X. (2022). Association between Dietary Pattern, Nutritional Status, Metabolic Factors, and Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. Contrast Media and Molecular Imaging, 2022. https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/4157403

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