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Cirrhosis is severe scarring of the liver. This serious condition can be caused by many forms of liver diseases and conditions, such as hepatitis or chronic alcoholism.
Each time your liver is injured — whether by excessive alcohol consumption or another cause, such as infection — it tries to repair itself. In the process, scar tissue forms. As cirrhosis gets worse, more and more scar tissue forms, making it difficult for the liver to do its job. Advanced cirrhosis is life-threatening.
The liver damage caused by cirrhosis generally can't be undone. But if liver cirrhosis is diagnosed early and the underlying cause is treated, further damage can be limited. In rare cases, it may be reversed.
Cirrhosis often has no symptoms until liver damage is severe. When symptoms do occur, they may include:
Make an appointment with your health care provider if you have any of the symptoms listed above.
A wide range of diseases and conditions can damage the liver and lead to cirrhosis.
Some of the causes include:
Complications of cirrhosis can include:
Lower your risk of cirrhosis by taking these steps to care for your liver:
If you're concerned about your risk of liver cirrhosis, talk to your health care provider about ways you can reduce your risk.
People with early-stage cirrhosis of the liver usually don't have symptoms. Often, cirrhosis is first found through a routine blood test or checkup. To help confirm a diagnosis, a combination of laboratory and imaging tests is usually done.
Your health care provider may order one or more tests to check your liver, including:
Laboratory tests. Your provider may order blood tests to check for signs of liver malfunction, such as high bilirubin levels or certain enzymes. To evaluate kidney function, your blood is checked for creatinine. Your blood count would be measured. You'll be screened for the hepatitis viruses. Your international normalized ratio (INR) is also checked for your blood's ability to clot.
Based on history and blood test results, your provider may be able to diagnose the underlying cause of cirrhosis. Blood tests also can help identify how serious your cirrhosis is.
If you have cirrhosis, your health care provider is likely to recommend regular tests to see if liver disease has progressed or check for signs of complications, especially esophageal varices and liver cancer. Noninvasive tests are becoming more widely available for monitoring liver disease.
Treatment for cirrhosis depends on the cause and extent of your liver damage. The goals of treatment are to slow the progression of scar tissue in the liver and to prevent or treat symptoms and complications of cirrhosis. You may need to be hospitalized if you have severe liver damage.
In early cirrhosis, it may be possible to minimize damage to the liver by treating the underlying cause. The options include:
Other medicines can relieve certain symptoms, such as itching, fatigue and pain. Nutritional supplements may be prescribed to counter malnutrition associated with cirrhosis. Supplements also can help prevent weak bones, known as osteoporosis.
Your health care provider will work to treat any complications of cirrhosis, including:
Portal hypertension. Certain blood pressure medicines may control increased pressure in the veins that supply the liver, called portal hypertension, and prevent severe bleeding. Your provider will regularly perform an upper endoscopy to look for enlarged veins in the esophagus or stomach that may bleed. These veins are known as varices.
If you develop varices, you likely will need medicine to lower the risk of bleeding. If you have signs that the varices are bleeding or are likely to bleed, you may need a procedure known as band ligation. Band ligation can stop the bleeding or reduce the risk of further bleeding. In severe cases, you may need a small tube — a transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt — placed in your vein to reduce blood pressure in your liver.
In advanced cases of cirrhosis, when the liver stops working properly, a liver transplant may be the only treatment option. A liver transplant is a procedure to replace your liver with a healthy liver from a deceased donor or with part of a liver from a living donor. Cirrhosis is one of the most common reasons for a liver transplant. Candidates for liver transplant have extensive testing to determine whether they are healthy enough to have a good outcome following surgery.
Historically, those with alcoholic cirrhosis have not been liver transplant candidates because of the risk that they will return to harmful drinking after transplant. Recent studies, however, suggest that carefully selected people with severe alcoholic cirrhosis have post-transplant survival rates similar to those of liver transplant recipients with other types of liver disease.
For transplant to be an option if you have alcoholic cirrhosis, you would need to:
Scientists are working to expand current treatments for cirrhosis, but success has been limited. Because cirrhosis has a variety of causes and complications, there are many potential avenues of approach. A combination of increased screening, lifestyle changes and new medicines may improve outcomes for people with liver damage, if started early.
Researchers are working on therapies that will specifically target liver cells, helping to slow or even reverse the fibrosis that leads to cirrhosis. However, no targeted therapy is quite ready.
If you have cirrhosis, be careful to limit additional liver damage:
If you have cirrhosis, you may be referred to a health care provider who specializes in the digestive system, called a gastroenterologist, or the liver, called a hepatologist.
Here's some information to help you get ready for your appointment and what to expect from your provider.
Preparing a list of questions can help you make the most of your time. Some basic questions to ask include:
Don't hesitate to ask additional questions during your appointment.
Be prepared to answer questions, including: