
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is often associated with type 2 diabetes. Like type 2 diabetes, it has been found mainly in developed countries. Fat invades the liver and causes scarring, and too far may cause liver failure. Researchers at the University of Verona in Italy examined nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and cardiac disease called atrial fibrillation in people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
In their study, PLos One In February 2013, 400 people with type 2 diabetes participated. Over 10 years ...
- 42 cases of atrial fibrillation were diagnosed.
Diabetic patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease have been found to be more than four times more likely to have fibrillation in the atria, as in patients without fatty liver disease.
There are four rooms in the heart. The top two are known as atrium, the bottom two are ventricles. When the heart beats, the atrium is defeated first, then the ventricle is defeated. During atrial fibrillation, the atria do not beat normally, but simply vibrate. Since the ventricle is more powerful than the atrium, the heart loses only a small loss of function. Many people live a normal life with atrial fibrillation, but sometimes they have difficulties with intense activities such as running. US President George HW Bush collapsed when he was running normally in good health and had to undergo treatment for atrial fibrillation. Atrial fibrillation can also cause stroke if it contributes to the formation of clots rather than being able to move to the brain.
To prevent non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, prevent or suppress type 2 diabetes by maintaining:
- Healthy vegan food,
- Normalize your weight
- I do enough exercise.
Symptoms of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease include,
- I am tired,
- Unintentional weight loss, and
- Pain in upper right part of abdomen.
As the disease progresses, confusion, memory loss, and black tarryy flights may occur.
A person with atrial fibrillation has an irregular heart beat. If you feel your pulse and the beat is obviously very irregular it may be due to atrial fibrillation. A doctor can diagnose the condition with an electrocardiogram, or EKG. The electrode placed on your chest measures the electricity flowing through your heart. A clear image of the digly line of the EKG part shows fibrillation. If atrial fibrillation is diagnosed, the doctor can use the defibrillator to recover normal heart beat once symptoms resolve early. If defibrillation does not work, please treat with a blood diluent to prevent clotting and stroke.
