A CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY OF CORRELATION BETWEEN BODY MASS INDEX AND LIVER ENZYMES IN ALCOHOLICS.

Author:

Narayan Patil Nandkumar1,Doshi Yagnesh Dhiren2

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor, Department of General Medicine, GMC Miraj & PVPGH Sangli.

2. Senior Resident, Department of General Medicine, GMC Miraj & PVPGH Sangli.

Abstract

Alcohol consumption, excess body weight, and related health problems have increased rapidly in our society. The hepatic physiology is affected by both ethanol consumption as well as excess body weight. With the increasing prevalence of heavy drinking and obesity, cirrhosis is among the leading causes of death, especially in the middle-aged. Hepatic status is often mirrored by measuring the activities of liver enzymes from serum. The rapid increase in the prevalence of obesity constitutes a major threat to modern health care. Both excess of alcohol consumption & obesity are known to lead to accumulation of fat in hepatic tissues & induce changes in liver derived enzymes in the serum. The aim of this study was to investigate the ef Aim: fects of rather moderate levels of alcohol drinking and excess body weight on the liver enzymes. These effects were studied both separately for each factor and in combination. In this study 205 Study Design: participants were involved as moderate drinkers. The study population was further split into, according to BMI. Serum Alanine AminoTransferase (ALT), Aspartate AminoTransferase (AST), Alkaline Phosphate (ALP) were examined in 205 alcoholic patients. Results: The correlation between BMI and liver enzymes, BMI and AST, BMI and ALT, BMI and Indirect Bilirubin was positive with signicant r value (as per pearson's correlation). It was noted that the liver enzymes increase Conclusion: d as a function of body weight throughout the BMI scale, and the activities were yet higher in moderate drinkers. The statistical results were signicant for the interactions between the effects of moderate drinking and the BMI.

Publisher

World Wide Journals

Subject

General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Education,General Business, Management and Accounting,Education,Psychiatry and Mental health,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Law,Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Political Science and International Relations,History,Management Science and Operations Research,Artificial Intelligence,General Engineering,Statistics and Probability,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Artificial Intelligence,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Mechanical Engineering,Control and Systems Engineering,Software,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Information Systems,Software

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