Hi Dr,
I have been diagnosed with non-alcoholic
fattyXanthoma liver. I had an ultrasound to confirm. Along the way, they saw I had a slightly
enlargedEnlarged adenoids
Enlarged prostate spleenEnlarged spleen
Liver and spleen cysts - ct scan
Liver scan
Spleen metastasis - ct scan
Spleen removal
Spleen removal - series
Splenomegaly. Are these related? Will a simple
fattyXanthoma liver cause that? Also, with the
enlargedEnlarged adenoids
Enlarged prostate spleenEnlarged spleen
Liver and spleen cysts - ct scan
Liver scan
Spleen metastasis - ct scan
Spleen removal
Spleen removal - series
Splenomegaly, does this mean I can no longer weight lift?
FYI-I am a 29 year old male, in decent shape, maybe 10-20 lbs overweight, and have been known to binge drink at parties, but definitely not a heavy drinker. I also have asthma, and have taken Prednisone, although not recently. I have taken the steroid pump as recently as last year.
I have a decent diet, although I have been known to eat too much fast food. I am now in the process of cutting out all alcohol, and going to a low fat diet. My liver enzymes were "mild", according to my physician.
Should I see a specialist regarding the relation to the spleen and fatty liver? I am not currently experiencing any symptoms, and I have the Hepatitis panel testing scheduled for next week.
Any info would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Joe
Low fat diet is a step in the right direction.
With regards to anyone with any liver disorder it is probably wise to get LFT's done regularly, and then if there are any symptoms [such as pain] to also get Ultrasound. It is also important to monitor any insults such as medications. Many medications are metabolised by the liver. If the liver has to do more than its usual share of work it is important to check out the impact that work is having.
If the fatty liver is not due to alcohol, weight reduction is helpful. If it is related to alcohol consumption then it would be wise to reduce or eliminate this insult - as one is on a path that could lead to significant liver problems.
The single most useful survailence are the LFT's or liver function test - which are a blood based analysis. If the results are within normal ranges then monitoring the trend will indicate any major changes. If the LFT's are already significantly out of normal range it would be wise to act immediately under medical supervision and removing any insults to the liver.
With respect to questions about drinking in general I'm reminded of a talk given by a clergyman who was also a recovering alcoholic - if a person's drinking is a cause for comment there is a drinking problem. So, with respect to anyone reading this comment, it wise to assertain, when dealing with questions of drink and health, is the cause of the question a health issue being questioned where the drink is not the centre of the question, or is it the drinking itself. The later would imply a drink problem and will require treatment regardless of the health issue. The former may or may not imply a drink problem but the health issue may require abstainance anyway.
Hope this helps
SMSIRL
took him to the doctor and the doctor retested it and it was still really high... went for a ultra sound all it showed was that his sleen was enlarge just very little, Doctor didnt seem to concernd about it just wanted another blood test in 3 weeks ...
should we be concernd or not ... what could be causing his enzymes to be extremly high... Please help me understand someone...