The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Alcohol use not the only, or even most likely, cause of cirrhosis

- Keith Roach

DEAR DR. ROACH » I am a 78-year-old woman who was diagnosed just one year ago with primary biliary cirrhosis, which is an autoimmune liver disease. It was determined that it took me many years to get to this stage, but I had no symptoms other than high liver enzymes from time to time. I am currently monitored for progressio­n and have very few symptoms.

When I mention this disease, my friends look at me with jaws dropped open and say they never knew I was a heavy drinker. I have never been a drinker. Though this is not a rare disease, most people have never heard of it, and when they hear the word “cirrhosis,” it is automatica­lly associated with alcoholism. Please explain to readers not all people with liver cirrhosis are alcoholics. DEAR READER » Cirrhosis of the liver is the end stage of many different illnesses, all of which cause progressiv­e destructio­n of the liver cells and cause fibrosis — a thickening or scarring — of the liver. Alcoholic liver disease is the single most common cause of cirrhosis referred for liver transplant, which may be why people tend to think of alcohol as the cause of all cirrhosis. The second leading cause is hepatitis C, a viral disease that is now curable. The third cause, as of this writing, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, is very likely to be the leading cause in the next few years, as the liver can be damaged from the metabolic changes that occur in obesity, especially in people who have abnormally high blood sugar, both prediabete­s and diabetes. Less-common causes include autoimmune hepatitis, hemochroma­tosis, primary biliary cholangiti­s (formerly called “primary biliary cirrhosis,” which you have) and primary sclerosing cholangiti­s. Alcohol, in reality, accounts for a minority of people with cirrhosis. However, drinking alcohol should be avoided by people with any kind of chronic liver disease, especially cirrhosis, since it damages liver cells.

Primary biliary cholangiti­s is, as you said, an autoimmune disease of the bile ducts of the liver.

Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

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