Højland Ipsen David, Tveden-Nyborg Pernille, Lykkesfeldt Jens
Department of Veterinary Disease Biology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2016 Mar;24(3):556-67. doi: 10.1002/oby.21443. Epub 2016 Feb 12.
The liver coordinates lipid metabolism and may play a vital role in the development of dyslipidemia, even in the absence of obesity. Normal weight dyslipidemia (NWD) and patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) who do not have obesity constitute a unique subset of individuals characterized by dyslipidemia and metabolic deterioration. This review examined the available literature on the role of the liver in dyslipidemia and the metabolic characteristics of patients with NAFLD who do not have obesity.
PubMed was searched using the following keywords: nonobese, dyslipidemia, NAFLD, NWD, liver, and metabolically obese/unhealthy normal weight. Additionally, article bibliographies were screened, and relevant citations were retrieved. Studies were excluded if they had not measured relevant biomarkers of dyslipidemia.
NWD and NAFLD without obesity share a similar abnormal metabolic profile. When compared with patients with NAFLD who have obesity, the metabolic abnormalities of NAFLD without obesity are similar or less severe. Furthermore, hepatic lesions develop independent of obesity, and the extent of dyslipidemia seems comparable.
NAFLD may impair hepatic lipid handling, causing faulty lipid homeostasis, and serves as a likely starting point for initiation and propagation of dyslipidemia along with associated comorbidities in patients without obesity.
肝脏协调脂质代谢,即使在无肥胖的情况下,也可能在血脂异常的发生发展中起关键作用。正常体重血脂异常(NWD)和无肥胖的非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)患者构成了以血脂异常和代谢恶化为特征的独特个体亚组。本综述研究了关于肝脏在血脂异常中的作用以及无肥胖的NAFLD患者代谢特征的现有文献。
使用以下关键词在PubMed中进行检索:非肥胖、血脂异常、NAFLD、NWD、肝脏以及代谢性肥胖/不健康正常体重。此外,对文章参考文献进行筛选,并检索相关引文。如果研究未测量血脂异常的相关生物标志物,则将其排除。
无肥胖的NWD和NAFLD具有相似的异常代谢特征。与肥胖的NAFLD患者相比,无肥胖的NAFLD患者的代谢异常相似或较轻。此外,肝脏病变的发生与肥胖无关,血脂异常的程度似乎相当。
NAFLD可能损害肝脏脂质处理功能,导致脂质稳态失调,并可能是无肥胖患者血脂异常及其相关合并症发生和发展的起始点。