In combination, two commonly used heart drugs reverse fat accumulation in the liver, a study in animals has shown.
Drinking more than one soda daily may increase liver disease risk by 50% to 60%. Replacing soda with water could reduce liver ...
A new European study finds both sugary and diet sodas raise risk of metabolic liver disease—even at modest intake levels.
Drinking diet and sugary beverages may raise the risk of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease by up to 60%, according to new ...
Once almost exclusively seen in older adults, fatty liver disease, which can be fatal if untreated, is now one of the world’s ...
A new study finds one can of diet soda may increase NAFLD risk by 60%, while water reduces it, challenging diet drink safety.
New research found that less than one can of soda a day can raise your risk of developing a fatty liver by up to 60%.
Imagine thinking that you’re in the pink of your health and keeping up with common habits that end up derailing that!Well, ...
Smoking among individuals with cirrhosis exacerbates inflammation, fibrogenesis, and angiogenesis, and increases risk for extrahepatic cancers in ACLD.
Drinking diet soda may be tied to an increased risk of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, according to a study.
Most of us think our liver works quietly in the background – cleaning blood, processing food, storing nutrients – like an ...
Salk Institute scientists discovered that bile acids in the liver can weaken immune cell function, making immunotherapy less effective against liver cancer. They pinpointed specific bile acids that ...