1. Muscle strength in non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease and all‐cause and cause‐specific mortality.
- Author
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Kim, Donghee, Dennis, Brittany B., Wijarnpreecha, Karn, Cholankeril, George, and Ahmed, Aijaz
- Subjects
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NON-alcoholic fatty liver disease , *FATTY liver , *MUSCLE strength , *MORTALITY - Abstract
Muscle strength in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and all-cause and cause-specific mortality Keywords: death; handgrip strength; hepatic steatosis; nhanes; sarcopenia EN death handgrip strength hepatic steatosis nhanes sarcopenia 513 516 4 01/27/23 20230201 NES 230201 Abbreviations BMI body mass index CI confidence interval HIS hepatic steatosis index HR hazard ratio NAFLD non-alcoholic fatty liver disease NHANES National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey UCOD underlying cause of death Key points Higher muscle strength among individuals with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is associated with a lower risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality independent of known demographic, clinical and metabolic risk factors. 8 Range of combined grip strength/body mass index for women: quartile 1: <1.437, quartile 2: >=1.437 and <1.712, quartile 3: >=1.712 and <2.025, quartile 4: >=2.025. First, we used a non-invasive marker to define NAFLD, which may misclassify the true prevalence of NAFLD, because NHANES 2011-2014 data lack radiological or histological information, which is considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of NAFLD. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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