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What Are the Major Causes of Cirrhosis?
Cirrhosis has
many causes. In the United States, chronic alcoholism is the most
common cause. Cirrhosis also may result from chronic viral hepatitis
(types B, C, or D).
Liver injury that results
in cirrhosis also may be caused by a number of inherited diseases
such as cystic fibrosis, alfa-1 antitrypsin deficiency, hemochromatosis,
Wilson's disease, galactosemia, and glycogen storage diseases.
Two inherited disorders
result in the abnormal storage of metals in the liver leading to
tissue damage and cirrhosis. People with Wilson's disease store
too much copper in their livers, brains, kidneys, and in the corneas
of their eyes.
In another disorder,
known as hemochromatosis, too much iron is absorbed, and the excess
iron is deposited in the liver and in other organs, such as the
pancreas, skin, intestinal lining, heart, and endocrine glands.
If a person's bile duct
becomes blocked, this also may cause cirrhosis. The bile ducts carry
bile formed in the liver to the intestines, where the bile helps
in the digestion of fat.
In babies, the most common
cause of cirrhosis due to blocked bile ducts is a disease called
biliary atresia. In this case, the bile ducts are absent or injured,
causing the bile to back up in the liver.
These babies are jaundiced
(their skin is yellowed) after their first month in life. Sometimes
they can be helped by surgery in which a new duct is formed to allow
bile to drain again from the liver.
In adults, the bile ducts
may become inflamed, blocked, and scarred due to another liver disease,
primary biliary cirrhosis. Another type of biliary cirrhosis also
may occur after a patient has gallbladder surgery in which the bile
ducts are injured or tied off.
Other, less common, causes
of cirrhosis are severe reactions to prescribed drugs, prolonged
exposure to environmental toxins, and repeated bouts of heart failure
with liver congestion.
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