LIVER INVOLVEMENT IN OBESE CHILDREN - ULTRASONOGRAPHY AND LIVER-ENZYME LEVELS AT DIAGNOSIS AND DURING FOLLOW-UP IN AN ITALIAN POPULATION

Citation
A. Franzese et al., LIVER INVOLVEMENT IN OBESE CHILDREN - ULTRASONOGRAPHY AND LIVER-ENZYME LEVELS AT DIAGNOSIS AND DURING FOLLOW-UP IN AN ITALIAN POPULATION, Digestive diseases and sciences, 42(7), 1997, pp. 1428-1432
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
ISSN journal
01632116
Volume
42
Issue
7
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1428 - 1432
Database
ISI
SICI code
0163-2116(1997)42:7<1428:LIIOC->2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
Our aim was to evaluate incidence and risk factors of liver involvemen t in obese Italian children as assessed by both ultrasonographic and b iochemical parameters. In seventy-five consecutive obese children (age 9.5 +/- 2.9 years, males/females 41/34), serum levels of enzymes and ultrasonography of the liver were evaluated. Tests were repeated one, three, and six months after starting a moderate hypocaloric diet and a n exercise program. Three obese children who were found to have chroni c viral hepatitis were excluded from the study. Thirty-eight of 72 (53 %) obese children had an ultrasonographic image of bright liver consis tent with liver steatosis. The latter was severe in nine children, mod erate in 16, and mild in 13. Eighteen obese children (25%) had elevate d transaminase levels. Bright liver and hypertransaminasemia were not due to any of the most common causes of liver disease. Both were rapid ly responsive to loss of weight, confirming that liver involvement was secondary to obesity and that steatosis or steatohepatitis rather tha n fibrosis were involved. Obesity duration not more than three years ( odds ratio = 4.77), a higher degree of obesity (odds ratio = 2.09), an d hypertransaminasemia (odds ratio = 2.15) appeared as important predi ctive factors of liver involvement at ultrasonography. Incidence of li ver involvement assessed by means of ultrasonography is significantly higher than that revealed by measurement of serum liver enzymes. A sho rt duration of obesity emerged as a potentially new risk factor of liv er involvement in the pediatric obese population and needs to be confi rmed in future studies.