Research Article Details
Article ID: | A47313 |
PMID: | 17544978 |
Source: | Clin Liver Dis |
Title: | Steatosis as a cofactor in other liver diseases: hepatitis C virus, alcohol, hemochromatosis, and others. |
Abstract: | As obesity prevalence rises, there is evidence that fatty liver disease can act synergistically with other chronic liver diseases to aggravate parenchymal injury. This is characterized best in chronic hepatitis C, where steatosis is caused by viral and metabolic effects. There is evidence that steatosis and its metabolic abnormalities also exacerbate other diseases, such as alcoholic liver disease, hemochromatosis, and, possibly, drug-induced liver disease. The pathogenesis seems related to increased susceptibility of steatotic hepatocytes to apoptosis, enhanced oxidative injury, and altered hepatocytic regeneration. Data suggest that active management of obesity may improve liver injury and decrease the progression of fibrosis in patients who have other chronic liver diseases. |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cld.2007.02.007 |

Strategy ID | Therapy Strategy | Synonyms | Therapy Targets | Therapy Drugs | |
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S03 | Anti-fibrosis | fibrosis | Angiotensin Receptor Blocker (ARB); CCR2/CCR5 antagonist; Thyroid receptor β agonist; PEGylated human FGF21 analogue; Monoclonal antibody to lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2); Galectin-3 inhibitor; FGF19 variant | Losartan; Cenicriviroc; VK-2809; MGL-3196; Pegbelfermin; Simtuzumab; GR-MD-02; NGM282 | Details |
S13 | Anti-apoptosis | hepatocyte apoptosis; hepatic autophagy; apoptosis | Pan-caspase inhibitor | Emricasan | Details |
Target ID | Target Name | GENE | Action | Class | UniProtKB ID | Entry Name |
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Diseases ID | DO ID | Disease Name | Definition | Class | |
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I14 | 9970 | Obesity | An overnutrition that is characterized by excess body fat, traditionally defined as an elevated ratio of weight to height (specifically 30 kilograms per meter squared), has_material_basis_in a multifactorial etiology related to excess nutrition intake, decreased caloric utilization, and genetic susceptibility, and possibly medications and certain disorders of metabolism, endocrine function, and mental illness. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obesity | disease of metabolism/acquired metabolic disease/ nutrition disease/overnutrition | Details |
Drug ID | Drug Name | Type | DrugBank ID | Targets | Category | Latest Progress |
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