Hepatic Abnormalities in Obesity: comparison between mildly obese cases and morbidly obese cases

1992 
Hepatic morphology and clinical course of mildly obese subjects with abnormal liver tests were determined in comparison with those of surgically treated morbidly obese cases. Twenty mildly obese subjects (mean body mass index, 27.9) with elevated serum transaminase levels were followed up on a low-calorie diet. Nineteen morbidly obese patients (mean body mass index, 39.2) had a surgical biopsy at gastric restrictive surgery. In these two groups, the frequency and the severity of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis were comparable, whereas intralobular cell infiltration was somewhat greater in the mildly obese group. Follow-up studies of the two groups showed remarkable improvement of serum transaminase levels, the extent of which was greater in surgically treated cases. Thus, in mildly obese subjects with abnormal liver tests, (1) hepatic histological abnormalities are not milder than those in morbidly obese cases, and (2) Improvement of serum transaminase levels upon diet therapy is less satisfactory than that in morbidly obese cases treated surgically. It is suggested these two groups may not be in the same spectrum of obesity-related hepatic disorders.
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