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      Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease pathogenesis: the present and the future.

      Digestive and liver disease : official journal of the Italian Society of Gastroenterology and the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver
      Adipokines, physiology, Adipose Tissue, metabolism, Animals, Apoptosis, Cytokines, Diet, Disease Progression, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified, blood, Fatty Liver, epidemiology, genetics, physiopathology, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Hepatocytes, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Lipolysis, Liver, chemistry, Mitochondria, Liver, Oxidative Stress, Risk Factors

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          Abstract

          Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is the clinical hepatic expression of metabolic syndrome. The prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is around 20-30%, and with a rapid increase in the metabolic risk factors in the general population, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease has become the most common cause of liver disease worldwide. A fraction (20-30%) of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease patients develop a potentially progressive hepatic disorder, namely non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, leading to end-stage liver disease. The pathogenesis of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is not entirely understood, and even if insulin resistance is a major pathogenetic key, many other factors are implicated in both liver fat accumulation and disease progression to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. In this review we aim to examine the literature, principally concerning human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease pathogenesis, and to identify the newest, most promising clinical and basic research data.

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