Our liver is a hardworking organ located in the upper right side of your abdomen, just under your ribs.
It acts like your body's filter and factory, clearing out toxins, storing nutrients, producing vital proteins, and helping you digest food. It's essential for your overall health.
The challenge is that when the liver is injured, whether from fat buildup, alcohol, viruses, or other causes, it often shows no warning signs.
You might feel completely fine even as damage slowly builds over time.
That's why chronic liver disease is often called a "silent illness."
When the liver gets hurt repeatedly, it tries to heal itself, just like your skin does when you get a cut. Imagine scraping the same spot on your hand again and again. At first, your body heals, but over time, a scar forms. The liver does something similar: repeated injury leads to scarring, known as fibrosis. If the scarring becomes severe and widespread, the liver becomes stiff and struggles to do its vital work, this advanced stage is called cirrhosis. Unfortunately, severe cirrhosis cannot be reversed. In end-stage liver disease, when the liver can no longer keep up with the body's needs, a liver transplant may be the only life-saving option. That’s why early detection and care are so important, to help prevent damage before it becomes permanent.
At Liver Health Connect, we’re here to support you with clear information about liver diseases, ways to protect your liver, and steps you can take to stay healthy, even if you feel perfectly fine today.
Read below for quick snapshots of each type of liver disease, or click on the title of each of them to read more.
Also known as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) or Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH)
This liver disease is mainly caused by fat deposition in the liver, which can be caused by unhealthy diets, lack of exercise, or uncontrolled diabetes.
Alcohol is toxic to the liver, and long-term use of alcohol can cause the liver to become inflamed and diseased.
While many viruses can infect the liver and cause short-term illness, the two viruses that can cause long-term (chronic) liver disease are Heptatitis B and Hepatitis C viruses.
Autoimmune liver diseases is a group of 3 diseases where the body attacks its own best organ, the liver.
Any of the above liver disease can increase the risk of developing liver cancer.
Cirrhosis is an unfortunate irreversible advanced stage of widespread scarring where the liver becomes stiff and is unable to do its job or heal anymore.
CirrhosisCare.ca is a really valuable resource to learn more about liver cirrhosis and its care.