Abstract
Drinking pattern as well as clinical, biochemical and histological findings were recorded of 282 males with alcohol-induced liver disease (fatty liver in 103, hepatitis in 61, cirrhosis in 118). The proportion of persons under 50 years of age was significantly greater with alcoholic hepatitis (70%) than cirrhosis (46%). Mean daily alcohol consumption was clearly lower among those with fatty liver than hepatitis or cirrhosis (P less than 0.02). Duration of alcohol abuse was on average shorter in patients with fatty liver and hepatitis than with cirrhosis (excessive consumption of less than 15 years was 61% and 62%, respectively, in the former, 28% in the latter (P less than 0.02). Symptoms and clinical and biochemical findings did not help in differentiating between hepatitis without cirrhotic change and cirrhosis. The most marked differences between cirrhosis and hepatitis, on one hand, and fatty liver, on the other, related to the frequency of certain signs and symptoms: upper abdominal pain, hard consistency of the liver, generalized jaundice, bleeding from esophageal varices and ascites; among biochemical findings they were: elevation of serum-bilirubin concentration above 34 mumol/l (2 mg/dl), lowering of the Quick values and of albumin concentration. Mortality rate during hospital stay was lower among patients with hepatitis but no cirrhotic change (6.6%) than among those with cirrhotic change (31.4%). While the prognosis under abstinence was relatively more favourable in patients with mild or moderately severe hepatitis, nonicteric forms require closer attention than has been given them so far.
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