Results showed that there were 5,281 cases of severe liver disease, including 251 cases of liver cancer. The researchers discovered that overweight men were almost 50pc more likely, and obese men more than twice as likely, to develop liver disease in later life than men of normal weight. Young men who are overweight or obese run a higher risk of developing severe liver disease or liver cancer in later life, according to new research. A high Body Mass Index (BMI) is associated with an increased risk of severe liver disease and liver cancer in adults, while also increasing the risk for type two diabetes. That's the case even when other factors are taken into account - such as alcohol consumption, opioid and use of narcotics - but the link between BMI and liver disease was not examined in great depth.
High BMI linked to severe liver disease in later life
Across these huge swathes of data, there were 5,281 cases of severe liver disease, which included 251 cases of liver cancer. A recent study provides more evidence of a link between high body mass index as a young man and severe liver disease in later life. Links between liver disease and BMIEarlier studies have demonstrated that a high BMI in adolescent men is associated with an increased risk of death from, or hospitalization for, end-stage liver disease later in life. They also used information from population-based registers charting liver cancer, severe liver disease, and type 2 diabetes. These liver diseases include chronic viral hepatitis B and C, as well as non-alcoholic liver disease.collected by :Lucy William
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