Newswise, December 18, 2015― Excessive alcohol consumption is
a global public health issue. In the United States, binge drinking is the most
common form ― so common, in fact, that the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention reports approximately one in six adults binge drinks about four
times each month.
Now, a study by University of Missouri School of Medicine
researchers shows that chronic alcohol use, when combined with repeated binge
drinking, causes more damage to the liver than previously thought.
“Heavy binge drinking by those who habitually consume alcohol
is the most common cause of liver damage in chronic alcoholic liver disease,”
said Shivendra Shukla, Ph.D., the Margaret Proctor Mulligan Professor of
medical pharmacology and physiology at the MU School of Medicine and lead
author of the study.
“We know that this behavior causes large fatty deposits in
the liver that ultimately impair the organ’s ability to function properly.
However, we wanted to understand the mechanism that causes this damage and the
extent of the harm. Our research focused on different forms of alcohol abuse
and the results of those behaviors.”
Shukla’s team studied mice to examine the extent of liver
injury caused by chronic alcohol use, repeat binge episodes and a combination
of both. During a four-week period, the team found that mice exposed to chronic
alcohol use and repeated binge consumption exhibited the highest levels of
liver damage.
“Either chronic alcohol use or acute repeat binge episodes
caused moderate liver damage when compared to the control group not exposed to
alcohol,” Shukla said.
“This outcome came as no surprise. However, in the mice
exposed to both chronic use and repeat binge episodes, liver damage increased
tremendously. Even more shocking was the extent of fatty deposits in the livers
of those exposed to chronic plus binge alcohol. It was approximately 13 times
higher than the control group.”
The highly amplified fat accumulation was in part caused by
metabolic changes within the liver. These changes not only significantly
increased fatty liver deposits, but increased stress on the organ while
decreasing the liver’s ability to fight the stress.
Shukla also pointed out that chronic and excessive alcohol use
should not be associated only with liver damage.
“Drinking alcohol excessively can create an inflammatory
response to the liver and other organ systems in the body,” Shukla said.
“If those organs work at a lower level of function, then a
whole host of physiological processes can be affected. It is important for us
to understand the extent of damage caused by alcohol abuse, which also can lead
to other health issues such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and some forms
of cancer.”
The study, “In Vivo Acute on Chronic Ethanol Effects in Liver:
A Mouse Model Exhibiting Exacerbated Injury, Altered Metabolic and Epigenetic
Responses,” recently was published in Biomolecules, a peer-reviewed
journal on biogenic substances published by the Multidisciplinary Digital
Publishing Institute.
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