Can you have cirrhosis for years and not know it?

Cirrhosis often has no signs or symptoms until liver damage is extensive. When signs and symptoms do occur, they may include: Fatigue. Easily bleeding or bruising.

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How many years can cirrhosis go undetected?

Cirrhosis of the liver can go undetected for many years. You may show no symptoms at all, even though your liver has stopped working properly in many different ways. By themselves, these symptoms may not be caused by cirrhosis of the liver.

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How many years does it take for cirrhosis to develop?

Alcohol-related cirrhosis usually develops after 10 or more years of heavy drinking. Women who drink heavily are more likely to get liver damage than men, partly because of their different size and build.

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How do I know if I have early cirrhosis?

The main symptoms of cirrhosis include: tiredness and weakness. feeling sick (nausea) and loss of appetite resulting in weight loss. red patches on your palms and small, spider-like blood vessels on your skin (spider angiomas) above waist level.

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Does cirrhosis show up in blood work?

Often, cirrhosis is first detected through a routine blood test or checkup. To help confirm a diagnosis, a combination of laboratory and imaging tests is usually done.

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Cirrhosis: Phil's story | NHS

41 related questions found

What test confirms cirrhosis?

Tests to confirm a diagnosis of cirrhosis include a complete blood count (CBC), liver enzyme, liver function and electrolyte testing as well as screening for other health conditions such as hepatitis B and C viruses, liver cancer or gallstones. In most cases, a liver biopsy is used to confirm the diagnosis.

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What is the best blood test for cirrhosis?

If you have symptoms of cirrhosis or you're at risk for the disease, your doctor will take a sample of your blood. These help spot signs of cirrhosis liver damage.
...
These tests include:
  • Alanine transaminase (ALT) and aspartate transaminase (AST). ...
  • Albumin test. ...
  • Bilirubin level. ...
  • Creatinine.

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At what age is cirrhosis common?

Cirrhosis is more common in adults ages 45 to 54. About 1 in 200 adults ages 45 to 54 in the United States has cirrhosis. Researchers believe the actual numbers may be higher because many people with cirrhosis are not diagnosed.

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What is a mild case of cirrhosis?

Mild cirrhosis may not cause any symptoms at all. Symptoms may include: Fluid buildup in the belly (ascites) Vomiting blood, often from bleeding in the blood vessels in the food pipe (esophagus) Gallstones.

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What stage is mild cirrhosis of the liver?

During stage 1, cirrhosis is so mild it's often difficult for physicians to detect. The most common symptom is fatigue. The cirrhosis is still reversible during this stage, but not enough liver tissue has been damaged to produce obvious symptoms of disease.

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Is early stage of liver cirrhosis curable?

Cirrhosis cannot usually be cured, but there are ways to manage the symptoms and any complications, and stop the condition getting worse.

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Can 2 years of drinking cause cirrhosis?

But how much alcohol does it take to cause liver cirrhosis? For cirrhosis to develop in men, a person must drink more than about 3 ounces of alcohol a day for more than 10 years. These 3 ounces include drinking 6 cans of beer, 5 glasses of wine, or 6 shots of liquor.

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Is early stage cirrhosis reversible?

In its advanced stages, cirrhosis is usually irreversible, so treatment may involve liver transplant. In its earlier stages, cirrhosis may be reversible if the underlying cause can be treated.

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What other diseases mimic cirrhosis?

Conditions that can mimic cirrhosis on imaging include pseudocirrhosis of treated breast cancer metastases to the liver, fulminant hepatic failure, miliary metastases, sarcoidosis, schistosomiasis, congenital hepatic fibrosis, idiopathic portal hypertension, early primary biliary cirrhosis, chronic Budd-Chiari syndrome ...

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What are 4 warning signs of a damaged liver?

If signs and symptoms of liver disease do occur, they may include:
  • Skin and eyes that appear yellowish (jaundice)
  • Abdominal pain and swelling.
  • Swelling in the legs and ankles.
  • Itchy skin.
  • Dark urine color.
  • Pale stool color.
  • Chronic fatigue.
  • Nausea or vomiting.

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Can you feel fine with liver failure?

Many people with cirrhosis can feel quite well and live for many years without needing a liver transplant. This is because the liver can function relatively well even when it is quite severely damaged.

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Is cirrhosis of the liver always fatal?

Is cirrhosis fatal? Having a diagnosis of cirrhosis of the liver doesn't mean you have an immediately fatal condition. However, as cirrhosis continues, more scarring occurs and liver function continues to decline. Eventually, your failing liver may become a life-threatening condition.

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Can liver function tests be normal with cirrhosis?

A number of pitfalls can be encountered in the interpretation of common blood liver function tests. These tests can be normal in patients with chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis. The normal range for aminotransferase levels is slightly higher in males, nonwhites and obese persons.

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How much alcohol causes cirrhosis?

According to some reports, cirrhosis does not develop below a lifetime alcohol consumption of 100 kg of undiluted alcohol[8]. This amount corresponds to an average daily intake of 30 grams of undiluted alcohol for 10 years.

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Is cirrhosis always terminal?

When a patient's liver disease reaches cirrhosis, a stage when the liver damage can no longer be reversed, it becomes a terminal diagnosis. Unlike most terminal illnesses, a cure may be available for some patients through a liver transplant.

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Can you drink moderately with cirrhosis?

If you have a more serious form of ARLD – alcoholic hepatitis or cirrhosis – life-long abstinence is recommended. This is because stopping drinking is the only way to prevent your liver damage getting worse and potentially stop you dying of liver disease.

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Can you live decades with cirrhosis?

Patients with compensated cirrhosis have a median survival that may extend beyond 12 years. Patients with decompensated cirrhosis have a worse prognosis than do those with compensated cirrhosis; the average survival without transplantation is approximately two years [13,14].

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What is the gold standard for diagnosing cirrhosis?

Liver biopsy is considered the gold standard for diagnosis of cirrhosis and staging of fibrosis.

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How high are liver enzymes with cirrhosis?

An AST/ALT ratio higher than one (where the AST is higher than ALT) means you may have cirrhosis. An AST/ALT ratio higher than 2:1 (where the AST is more than twice as high as the ALT) is a sign of alcoholic liver disease.

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What blood test shows liver damage from alcohol?

Gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase test.

This is an enzyme that is made in the liver, pancreas, and biliary tract. This test is often performed to assess liver function, to provide information about liver diseases, and to detect alcohol ingestion.

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