Research Article Details

Article ID: A06719
PMID: 32770818
Source: Liver Int
Title: Steatosis as main determinant of portal hypertension through a restriction of hepatic sinusoidal area in a dietary rat nash model.
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: Portal hypertension (PH) can be present in pre-cirrhotic stages, even in absence of fibrosis in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) patients. Liver endothelial dysfunction (ED) has been shown as responsible for this effect in short-term dietary animal models. We evaluated the persistence of PH and underlying mechanisms in a long-term rat model of NASH. METHODS: Sprague-Dawley rats were fed 8 or 36&#160;weeks with control diet or high-fat high-glucose/fructose diet. Metabolic parameters, histology, ED and haemodynamics were characterized. Structural characteristics of liver sections were analysed using image analysis. RESULTS: Both interventions reproduced NASH histological hallmarks (with steatosis being particularly increased at 36&#160;weeks), but neither induced fibrosis. The 36-week intervention induced a significant increase in portal pressure (PP) compared to controls (12.1 vs 8.7&#160;mmHg, P&#160;<&#160;.001) and the 8-week model (10.7&#160;mmHg, P&#160;=&#160;.006), but all features of ED were normalized at 36&#160;weeks. Image analysis revealed that the increased steatosis at 36-week was associated to an increase in hepatocyte area and a significant decrease in the sinusoidal area, which was inversely correlated with PP. The analysis provided a critical sinusoidal area above which animals were protected from developing PH and below which sinusoidal flux was compromised and PP started to increase. CONCLUSION: Liver steatosis per se (in absence of fibrosis) can induce PH through a decrease in the sinusoidal area secondary to the increase in hepatocyte area in a long-term diet-induced rat model of NASH. Image analysis of the sinusoidal area might predict the presence of PH.
DOI: 10.1111/liv.14632