Sex-related differences among 100 patients with alcoholic liver disease.
- 9 April 1977
- Vol. 1 (6066) , 939-941
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.6066.939
Abstract
During 1975 we studied 100 patients--77 men and 23 women--who had a history of alcohol abuse and disturbed liver function test results. On presentation the women were less likely to be suspected of alcohol abuse (9; 38%) than the men (59; 77%). Although the quantity of alcohol consumed and length of history of alcohol abuse were similar for men and women, the incidence of chronic advanced liver disease was higher among women (86%) than among men (65%). Women, however, were less likely to have developed primary liver cell cancer. Overall the women had a higher incidence of other alcohol-related disorders and were less likely to stop abusing alcohol (2; 9%) than were their male counterparts (22; 29%). Women seem to be more susceptible to alcohol-related disease.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- CASUAL BLOOD-ETHANOL' ESTIMATIONS IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC LIVER DISEASEThe Lancet, 1975
- Studies in alcoholic liver disease in Britain: 1 Clinical and pathological patterns related to natural historyGut, 1974
- PHYSICAL DISEASE IN ALCOHOLISM INITIAL SURVEY OF 1,000 PATIENTSThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1971
- EPIDEMIOLOGY OF ALCOHOLIC CIRRHOSISAustralasian Annals of Medicine, 1969
- Cirrhosis and hepatoma in alcoholics.Gut, 1966