Diabetes Mellitus and Cirrhosis of the Liver
- 1 November 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 108 (5) , 695-701
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1961.03620110035006
Abstract
One of the first pathologic changes described in the diabetic patient was an enlarged, fatty liver.1 Since that time, numerous studies have indicated that a fatty liver is present in from 15% to 50% of diabetic patients.2,3 Laboratory evidence of liver dysfunction is present in a significant percentage of diabetic patients.3-5 Fatty metamorphosis of the liver is an integral part of the pathologic picture in the majority of cases of cirrhosis of the liver.6 Many investigators have stated that if a fatty liver from any cause persists, cirrhosis will develop.7 Chaikoff and Connor reported that the production of a fatty liver in the dog by a high-fat diet will ultimately lead to cirrhosis of the liver.8 Pancreatectomized dogs maintained on insulin develop a fatty liver and ultimately show cirrhosis of the liver.9 Despite these facts, a direct relationship between diabetes mellitus and cirrhosisKeywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- CIRRHOTIC GLOMERULOSCLEROSIS, A RENAL LESION ASSOCIATED WITH HEPATIC CIRRHOSIS1959
- THE ASSOCIATION OF LAENNEC'S CIRRHOSIS WITH DIABETES MELLITUSAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1950
- AN OUTBREAK OF SYRINGE-TRANSMITTED HEPATITIS WITH JAUNDICE IN HOSPITALIZED DIABETIC PATIENTSAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1950
- Role of the Endocrines in the Regulation of Blood Sugar1Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1944
- Fatty infiltration of the liver and the development cirrhosis in diabetes and chronic alcoholism1938
- Fatty infiltration and cirrhosis of the liver in depancreatized dogs maintained with insulin1938