Abstract

Fatty liver or hepatic steatosis, which is the result of the abnormal accumulation of triacylglycerol within the cytoplasm of hepatocytes, is a common histological finding in human liver biopsy specimens that is attributed to the effects of alcohol excess, obesity, diabetes, or drugs. There is a general consensus that fatty liver compromises hepatic microcirculation, the common exchange network upon which hepatic arterial and portal inflows converge, regardless of underlying etiology. A significant reduction in hepatic microcirculation has been observed in human fatty donor livers and in experimental models of hepatic steatosis. There is an inverse correlation between the degree of fat infiltration and both total hepatic blood flow and flow in microcirculation. Fatty accumulation in the cytoplasm of the hepatocytes is associated with an increase in the cell volume that reduces the size of the hepatic sinusoid space by 50% compared with a normal liver and may result in partial or complete obstruction of the hepatic sinusoid space. As a result of impaired hepatic microcirculation, the hepatocytes of the fatty liver have reduced tolerance against ischemia-reperfusion injury, which affects about 25% of the donors for liver transplantation because severe steatosis is associated with a high risk of primary nonfunction after liver transplantation.

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