Researchers focused on what's known as non-alcoholic fatty liver
disease, which is associated with obesity and certain eating habits.
While red and processed meat has long been linked to an increased
risk of diabetes, certain cancers and heart disease, evidence to
date has been mixed about its connection to liver disease.
The study team examined data on 789 adults who completed
questionnaires about their eating and cooking habits and also
underwent liver ultrasound scans as well as lab tests for insulin
resistance.
Overall, 39 percent of the participants were found to have
non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and 31 percent had insulin
resistance, which happens when the body is less effective at using
the hormone insulin to convert sugars in the blood into energy for
cells.
People who ate more processed and red meat than at least half of the
other participants were 47 percent more likely to have liver disease
and 55 percent more likely to have insulin resistance, researchers
report in the Journal of Hepatology.
Both NAFLD and insulin resistance are among the suite of symptoms
and traits that make up so-called metabolic syndrome, which raises
risk for both heart disease and diabetes, the authors note.
"Evidence is mounting with regard to the harmful effect of
over-consumption of red and processed meat," said lead study author
Shira Zelber-Sagi, a nutrition researcher at the University of
Haifa.
Cooking meat at high temperatures for longer periods of time until
it's "well done" was also associated with a higher risk of liver
disease and insulin resistance than eating meat more "rare" or
cooked more briefly, the study also found.
Preparing meat "well done" forms compounds known as heterocyclic
amines (HCAs) that are tied to both liver disease and insulin
resistance, Zelber-Sagi said.
"In order to prevent insulin resistance and NAFLD, (people should
consider) choosing fish, turkey or chicken as an animal protein
source," she said in an email. "In addition, steaming or boiling
food (is better than) grilling or frying meat at a high temperature
until it is very well done."
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Most people have a little bit of fat in their liver. Fatty liver
disease can occur when more than 5 percent of the liver by weight is
made up of fat. Excessive drinking can damage the liver and cause
fat to accumulate, a condition known as alcoholic fatty liver, but
even when people don't drink much, they can still develop
non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
The study participants were 59 years old on average and typically
were overweight. About 15 percent had diabetes.
High consumption of red and processed meat was associated
independently with liver disease and with insulin resistance
regardless of saturated fat and cholesterol intake and other risk
factors such as obesity, exercise, smoking and alcohol consumption.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how red or processed meat might directly cause liver damage or
insulin resistance.
Researchers also relied on participants to accurately recall and
report how much meat they ate and how it was prepared, which might
not always be an accurate picture of their eating habits.
Still, the results add to a large and growing body of evidence
suggesting that people should limit how much red and processed meat
they eat, said Dr. Jeffrey Schwimmer, a researcher at the University
of California, San Diego, and director of the Fatty Liver Clinic at
Rady Children's Hospital.
"Dietary recommendations are too complicated to develop from any one
study," Schwimmer, who wasn't involved in the current research, said
by email.
"However, there is not a need for red meat, so one could choose to
avoid it all together," Schwimmer said. "Based upon this and other
studies, for those that do eat meat, it would be reasonable to limit
red meat to once a week and to limit processed meat to occasional
use only."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2EFAxEx Journal of Hepatology, online March
19, 2018.
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