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Showing papers by "Paul Angulo published in 2009"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2009-Gut
TL;DR: Children with NAFLD may develop end-stage liver disease with the consequent need for liver transplantation andNAFLD in children seen in a tertiary care centre may be associated with a significantly shorter survival as compared to the general population.
Abstract: Objectives: The long-term prognosis of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in children remains uncertain. We aimed at determining the long-term outcomes and survival of children with NAFLD. Design: Retrospective longitudinal hospital-based cohort study. Patients: Sixty-six children with NAFLD (mean age 13.9 (SD 3.9) years) were followed up for up to 20 years with a total of 409.6 person-years of follow-up. Results: The metabolic syndrome was present in 19 (29%) children at the time of NAFLD diagnosis with 55 (83%) presenting with at least one feature of the metabolic syndrome including obesity, hypertension, dyslipidaemia and/or hyperglycaemia. Four children with baseline normal fasting glucose developed type 2 diabetes 4–11 years after NAFLD diagnosis. A total of 13 liver biopsies were obtained from five patients over a mean of 41.4 (SD 28.8) months showing progression of fibrosis stage in four children. During follow-up, two children died and two underwent liver transplantation for decompensated cirrhosis. The observed survival free of liver transplantation was significantly shorter in the NAFLD cohort as compared to the expected survival in the general United States population of the same age and sex (log-rank test, p Conclusions: Children with NAFLD may develop end-stage liver disease with the consequent need for liver transplantation. NAFLD in children seen in a tertiary care centre may be associated with a significantly shorter survival as compared to the general population.

623 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: High‐dose betaine supplementation failed to reduce S‐adenosylhomocysteine and did not positively affect any of the second hit mechanisms postulated to contribute to NASH that the authors studied.

196 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results highlight the limitations of published proposals to classify pediatric NAFLD, and identified histological lesions associated with progressive disease.

196 citations