Steatotic liver disease – how to recognize it and stop its progression?
Steatotic liver disease (SLD) already affects over one billion people worldwide and increasingly develops without symptoms for many years. Prof. Piotr Milkiewicz from the Department of Hepatology, Transplantology and Internal Diseases at UCK WUM, head of the Center for Rare Liver Diseases at UCK WUM within the European ERN-RARE LIVER Network, explains why the liver, despite its remarkable regenerative capacity, can still be severely damaged, how to detect the disease early, and what role lifestyle and modern treatment methods play.
Steatotic liver disease (SLD) already affects over one billion people worldwide and increasingly develops without symptoms for many years. Prof. Piotr Milkiewicz from the Department of Hepatology, Transplantology and Internal Diseases at UCK WUM, head of the Center for Rare Liver Diseases at UCK WUM within the European ERN-RARE LIVER Network, explains why the liver, despite its remarkable regenerative capacity, can still be severely damaged, how to detect the disease early, and what role lifestyle and modern treatment methods play.
Steatotic liver disease – how to recognize it and stop its progression?
Steatotic liver disease (SLD) already affects over one billion people worldwide and increasingly develops without symptoms for many years. Prof. Piotr Milkiewicz from the Department of Hepatology, Transplantology and Internal Diseases at UCK WUM, head of the Center for Rare Liver Diseases at UCK WUM within the European ERN-RARE LIVER Network, explains why the liver, despite its remarkable regenerative capacity, can still be severely damaged, how to detect the disease early, and what role lifestyle and modern treatment methods play.
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