Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease, or NAFLD, is on the rise in the United States thanks to a huge increase in obesity rates over the last three decades. In industrialized countries, 20-40% of the general population has some form of fatty liver disease and the chances of its progressing increase with age.

Officially recognized as a disease in the early 1980s, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease perplexed the medical community. Obese and diabetic patients had elevated liver enzymes and enlarged livers virtually identical to those typically seen in alcoholics, but most of them insisted they were not drinking excessively.

Liver Function Basics

The liver is your largest internal organ. It performs hundreds of functions including:

  • processing everything you eat and drinkpulling toxins from your bloodfighting off infectioncontrolling blood sugar levelshelping to manufacture hormones and proteins

Symptoms

The liver normally weighs about three pounds. When more than 5-10% of your liver’s weight is fat, you have a “fatty liver.” While excess liver fat, or steatosis, causes no problems for some, it can cause symptoms of impaired liver function, including:

  • fatigue
  • nausea
  • abdominal pain
  • yellowing skin or eyes (as in jaundice)

Inflammation that causes scarring is a hallmark symptom of liver injury in advanced non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, which can lead to cirrhosis. Once you damage your liver, your body lays down collagen to repair it. Fibrosis or thickening of the liver tissue then ensues.

As the non-alcoholic fatty liver disease progresses, about 10% of cases will develop over the next ten years into the much more serious NASH or nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. NASH can lead to:

  • cirrhosis or hardening of the liver
  • liver failure
  • liver cancer
  • death

Diagnosis

An accurate diagnosis of non-alcoholic liver disease is the first step towards treating this, sometimes, serious health condition. Your physician will usually diagnose fatty liver disease by:

  • administering tests to detect elevated liver enzymes
  • ordering an ultrasound to determine if you have an enlarged liver
  • performing a  liver biopsy to determine whether you have NASH or simple fatty liver

Risk Factors

Though the exact causes of NAFLD are not known, patients have some pre-existing conditions in common, including:

  • obesity
  • type 2 diabetes
  • have metabolic syndrome diagnosis

What’s more, the severity of NAFLD increases with the degree of obesity, and abdominal or belly fat seems to increase the risk of dangerous NASH, even in patients with a body mass index (BMI) in the normal range.

Dietary Considerations

What you eat and the nutrition it provides contributes to the onset, progression, and treatment of NAFLD. Dietary factors that increase your risk include consuming:

BMI is a dated, flawed measure. It does not take into account factors such as body composition, ethnicity, sex, race, and age. Even though it is a biased measure, BMI is still widely used in the medical community because it’s an inexpensive and quick way to analyze a person’s potential health status and outcomes.

  • a high-calorie dieta diet rich in hydrogenated oil (trans fats)too much protein from animal sources, resulting in a high intake of saturated fat and cholesteroltoo many beverages sweetened with high fructose corn syrup

Dietary factors that reduce your risk of NAFLD include:

  • consuming fewer calorieseating protein from whey or vegetable sources, instead of from meat and cheeselosing 3 to 10 percent of your bodyweightadding fiber, green tea, and coffee to your diet