Researchers focused on what's known as non-alcoholic fatty liver
disease (NAFDL), which is usually associated with obesity and
certain eating habits. While dietary changes are recommended to
treat this type of liver disease, research to date hasn't clearly
demonstrated whether these changes can work for prevention.
For the current study, researchers examined data from dietary
questionnaires and liver fat scans for 1,521 people enrolled in the
long-running Framingham Heart Study. Participants did the
questionnaires and scans twice, at least three to four years apart.
During the study, people with above-average increases in adherence
to a healthy Mediterranean diet rich in whole grains, fish, lean
protein, veggies and olive oil were at least 26 percent less likely
to develop fatty liver than individuals with average increases in
adherence, the study found.
Above-average increases in sticking to another liver-friendly diet,
the so-called Alternative Healthy Eating Index, were associated with
at least 21 percent lower odds of developing fatty liver,
researchers report in Gastroenterology.
People with a high genetic risk for fatty liver disease whose diet
scores decreased during the study period accumulated more fat in
their livers. But even with a high genetic risk, fat accumulation
didn't increase if people kept their diets the same or improved
them.
"Our findings demonstrate that increasing diet quality is associated
with less liver fat accumulation and reduced risk for new-onset
fatty liver, particularly in individuals with a high genetic risk
for NAFLD," said senior study author Dr. Daniel Levy, director of
the Framingham Heart Study and a researcher at the National
Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.
Participants who had improved diet quality scores consumed more
fruit, vegetables, and whole grains, which have high amounts of
water and fiber.
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"We speculated that these foods may decrease energy intake by
affecting satiety and improve weight control and therefore reduce
liver fat," Levy said by email. "It is also possible that fiber
intake may affect gut bacteria and subsequently have impact on liver
fat."
Both diets in the study also limit intake of red meat that can lead
to liver fat, and encourage consumption of foods like nuts, which
may help reduce liver fat accumulation, Levy added.
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 wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how diet changes might impact the risk of developing fatty liver.
Researchers also relied on questionnaires to assess participants"
diets, which can be unreliable, and they lacked data on non-dietary
causes of liver fat accumulation including certain medications and
viral infections.
Even so, the findings add to the evidence suggesting that healthy
eating habits can minimize the risk of fatty liver disease, even
when people have a genetic risk for this condition, said Shira
Zelber-Sagi, a researcher at the University of Haifa in Israel who
wasn't involved in the study.
"Genetics is not a destiny," Zelber-Sagi said by email. "The
patients have the power to improve their liver health by themselves
in many cases of NAFLD."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2r6sVG3 Gastroenterology, online March 28,
2018.
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