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			 Researchers focused on what's known as non-alcoholic fatty liver 
			disease (NAFLD), 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 3,882 adults who were 70 
			years old on average. Scans showed 1,337 participants, or 34 percent 
			had NAFLD, including 132 individuals who were a healthy weight and 
			1,205 who were overweight.
 
 Overweight people who ate the most animal protein were 54 percent 
			more likely to have fatty liver than individuals who consumed less 
			meat, the analysis found.
 
			
			 
			
 "This was independent of common risk factors for NAFLD such as 
			sociodemographic factors, lifestyle, and metabolic factors, said 
			senior study author Dr. Sarwa Darwish Murad, a hepatologist at 
			Erasmus MC University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
 
 "Perhaps most importantly, the association was independent of total 
			caloric intake," Murad said by email. "We also showed that a diverse 
			diet is important."
 
 Study participants without fatty liver consumed an average of 2,052 
			calories a day, compared with 1,996 calories per day on average for 
			people with fatty liver, researchers report in Gut.
 
 People with fatty liver also got more of their total calories from 
			protein: 16 percent compared with 15.4 percent without the liver 
			condition. Vegetable consumption was similar for both groups; meats 
			accounted for the difference in protein consumption.
 
 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.
 
			
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			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 and calorie intake, 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.
 
 "Meat contains saturated fat, especially red meat, which induces 
			fatty liver," Zelber-Sagi said by email.
 
 Processed meat is particularly unhealthy because it can contribute 
			to inflammation and so-called insulin resistance, or an inability to 
			respond normally to the hormone insulin that can lead to elevated 
			blood sugar levels and diabetes, Zelber-Sagi added. Both 
			inflammation and insulin resistance can lead to fat accumulation in 
			the liver.
 
 The current study results add to the evidence suggesting that people 
			should limit red and processed meat and try to eat more fish and 
			follow a Mediterranean diet, Zelber-Sagi added. A Mediterranean diet 
			is rich in whole grains, fish, lean protein, veggies and olive oil.
 
 At most, people should eat red meat no more than once or twice a 
			week, Zelber-Sagi advised. Processed meat should be avoided or 
			consumed only rarely.
 
			
			 
			SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Gndung Gut, online January 17, 2019. 
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