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Heart Failure Risk With NAFLD May Be Explained By Obesity

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  1. In Love With Medicine

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    The excess weight that causes fatty liver disease also raises a person's risk for heart failure, a recent study suggests.

    While nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has long been linked to heart failure, the current study followed fatty liver patients over 5 years and found obesity may be the real culprit.

    "It's critical to both your liver health and your heart health to maintain a healthy weight," said study coauthor Dr. Lisa VanWagner of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

    VanWagner and colleagues followed 159 people with NAFLD and 1,668 people without the condition over 5 years.

    People with NAFLD had an average body mass index (BMI) of 36; those without it had an average BMI of 29.6.

    Participants with fatty liver were more likely to have risk factors for heart failure like high blood pressure and diabetes than those without NAFLD.

    Once researchers accounted for other heart failure risk factors, they still found that people with fatty liver were roughly twice as likely as those without it to develop structural problems with the heart that lead to heart failure.

    And once researchers also factored in weight, there was no longer a meaningful difference in the risk of heart problems between the two groups, suggesting that weight explains the difference.

    "We already knew that fatty liver disease is connected with the presence of damage in the heart structure and function," said Dimitrios Koutoukidis, a researcher at the University of Oxford in the UK who wasn't involved in the study.

    "This study tells us that fatty liver disease is linked to the development and worsening of such damage in the heart over 5 years, and that this link was mostly due to the higher levels of obesity in people with fatty liver disease," Koutoukidis said by email.

    The study wasn't designed to prove whether fatty liver disease actually causes heart failure. Another limitation is that too many people were obese for researchers to determine how much the risk might differ between overweight vs obese individuals.

    It's possible that inflammation and hyperglycemia, which can be more common in people with obesity, also contribute to fatty liver and heart failure, the study team notes in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

    A low-calorie healthy diet and higher levels of physical activity that lead to weight loss can help overweight or obese people prevent fatty liver disease, Koutoukidis added.

    "Even a small amount of weight loss can also help people with fatty liver disease and overweight improve their liver and reduce their risk for heart disease," Koutoukidis said.

    —Lisa Rapaport

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