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Treatment
Liver damage from cirrhosis cannot be reversed,
but treatment can stop or delay further progression and reduce complications.
Treatment depends on the cause of cirrhosis and any complications
a person is experiencing. For example, cirrhosis caused by alcohol
abuse is treated by abstaining from alcohol. Treatment for hepatitis-related
cirrhosis involves medications used to treat the different types
of hepatitis, such as interferon for viral hepatitis and corticosteroids
for autoimmune hepatitis. Cirrhosis caused by Wilson's disease,
in which copper builds up in organs, is treated with medications
to remove the copper. These are just a few examples--treatment for
cirrhosis resulting from other diseases will depend on the underlying
cause. In all cases, regardless of the cause, following a healthy
diet and avoiding alcohol are essential because the body needs all
the nutrients it can get, and alcohol will only lead to more liver
damage.
Treatment will also include remedies for complications. For example,
for ascites and edema, the doctor may recommend a low-sodium diet
or the use of diuretics, which are drugs that remove fluid from
the body. Antibiotics will be prescribed for infections, and various
medications can help with itching. Protein causes toxins to form
in the digestive tract, so eating less protein will help decrease
the buildup of toxins in the blood and brain. The doctor may also
prescribe laxatives to help absorb the toxins and remove them from
the intestines.
For portal hypertension, the doctor may prescribe blood pressure
medication such as a beta-blocker. If varices bleed, the doctor
may either inject them with a clotting agent or perform a rubber-band
ligation, which uses a special device to compress the varices and
stop the bleeding.
When complications cannot be controlled or when the liver becomes
so damaged from scarring that it completely stops functioning, a
liver transplant is necessary. In liver transplantation surgery,
a diseased liver is removed and replaced with a healthy one from
an organ donor. About 80 to 90 percent of people survive liver transplantation.
Survival rates have improved over the past several years because
of drugs such as cyclosporine and tacrolimus, which suppress the
immune system and keep it from attacking and damaging the new liver.
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