2018
DOI: 10.1002/jgh3.12057
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Is obesity rather than the dietary supplement used for weight reduction the cause of liver injury?

Abstract: Acute liver injury has been attributed to dietary supplements (DS) used for weight loss, but their causal role was much questioned, and obesity as an alternative cause of the liver injury remained unclear. A comprehensive search of the Medline database was conducted with terms that included “DS,” “liver injury,” “obesity,” “obesity‐related liver diseases,” and “nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.” For each term, we focused on the first 50 publications. We undertook a manual search to identify additional reports. Und… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(232 reference statements)
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“…Along with oxidative stress, there is a continuous generation of radicals including ROS by not only hepatocytes but also non-parenchymal cells and leucocytes (Figure 9). Because of incomplete intracellular oxygen splitting, radicals are part of common life in any healthy organism such as plants [277,278,279,280], animals [280], and humans [281,282]. ROS and the other reactive radicals are commonly scavenged by antioxidants and thereby detoxified.…”
Section: Cascade Of Molecular Mechanisms and Cellular Eventsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Along with oxidative stress, there is a continuous generation of radicals including ROS by not only hepatocytes but also non-parenchymal cells and leucocytes (Figure 9). Because of incomplete intracellular oxygen splitting, radicals are part of common life in any healthy organism such as plants [277,278,279,280], animals [280], and humans [281,282]. ROS and the other reactive radicals are commonly scavenged by antioxidants and thereby detoxified.…”
Section: Cascade Of Molecular Mechanisms and Cellular Eventsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ROS and the other reactive radicals are commonly scavenged by antioxidants and thereby detoxified. Disease occurs if these protective mechanisms are lacking, with obesity as a good example because radicals play an important role for many obesity-related co-morbidities [281]. ROS is also implicated in liver injury [282,283] including alcoholic liver disease [92,231,240] where various forms of ROS and reactive radicals are contributory (Table 5).…”
Section: Cascade Of Molecular Mechanisms and Cellular Eventsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lifestyle interventions can result in weight loss, decrease CVD, improve fibrosis, and delay the progress of T2DM [ 109 , 110 , 111 , 112 ]. Weight loss enhances the levels of aminotransferases and hepatic steatosis, as measured either by ultrasonography or magnetic resonance spectroscopy in proportion to the total quantity of weight lost [ 113 ].…”
Section: Treatment Of Lipotoxic Liver Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is yet some uncertainty about the mechanisms of the CYP 2E1 increase and related gene expression upregulation caused by chronic alcohol consumption [52,[93][94][95][96]. For instance, prolonged alcohol use leads to an increased content of CYP 2E1 due to the transcription of the CYP 2E1 gene and occurs by a twostep mechanism [94] and when blood alcohol levels are high [93].…”
Section: Hepatic Microsomal Cyp 2e1 Specificsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it has also been pointed out that increased CYP 2E1 levels are rarely accompanied by respective elevations of CYP 2E1 mRNA levels and may involve increases in gene transcription, mRNA translation, or protein stability against proteasome-mediated degradation [52]. Mechanisms of increased CYP 2E1 may be variable among the different diseases and conditions causing such increases unrelated to alcohol use [14,[95][96][97]. Of clinical interest are increased hepatic levels of CYP 2E1 observed in patients with obesity and associated nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, diabetes mellitus, or the metabolic syndrome, as well as in fasting individuals [14].…”
Section: Hepatic Microsomal Cyp 2e1 Specificsmentioning
confidence: 99%