Fatty liver disease is now one of the most common liver conditions in India — and most people who have it don’t know. No pain. No obvious symptoms. Yet if left unaddressed, it can progress silently to irreversible liver damage.
What Is Fatty Liver Disease?
Fatty liver disease — medically called Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) — occurs when fat accumulates in liver cells in people who drink little or no alcohol. It is now the leading cause of liver disease worldwide, closely linked to metabolic conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, and high cholesterol.
In India, NAFLD affects an estimated 25–30% of the adult population, and the prevalence is rising sharply — particularly in urban populations with sedentary lifestyles and high-calorie diets.
The Four Grades of Fatty Liver
- Grade 1 (Mild): Small fat deposits. Liver function mostly normal. Reversible with lifestyle change.
- Grade 2 (Moderate): More fat, early inflammation. Requires medical attention and sustained lifestyle correction.
- Grade 3 (Severe NASH): Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis — active liver inflammation and cell injury. Risk of fibrosis begins.
- Grade 4 (Cirrhosis): Scarring of the liver. Liver function declines significantly. This stage is largely irreversible.
Why Does Fat Accumulate in the Liver?
The liver processes all nutrients that enter the body. When overwhelmed with excess calories — particularly refined carbohydrates, fructose from sugary drinks, and saturated fats — it converts the surplus into fat and stores it within its own cells.
Key risk factors include:
- Overweight or obesity (especially abdominal fat)
- Type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance
- High triglycerides or low HDL cholesterol
- Hypothyroidism
- Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
- Rapid weight loss or crash dieting
- Certain medications (steroids, tamoxifen)
Symptoms: Why Most People Miss It
Grade 1 and Grade 2 fatty liver are almost entirely silent. The liver has no pain receptors, so fat accumulation causes no discomfort. Most cases are discovered incidentally during:
- Routine ultrasound abdomen
- Blood tests showing elevated liver enzymes (SGPT/ALT, SGOT/AST)
- Health check-ups for diabetes or cholesterol
When symptoms do appear, they often suggest the disease has already progressed:
- Persistent fatigue and weakness
- Dull ache or heaviness in the upper right abdomen
- Unexplained weight loss
- Yellowing of skin or eyes (jaundice) — in advanced stages
- Swelling of the abdomen (ascites) — in cirrhosis
How Is Fatty Liver Diagnosed?
An ultrasound abdomen is the most common first test — it shows a “bright” or echogenic liver when fat is present. However, ultrasound cannot measure the degree of liver stiffness or detect early fibrosis accurately.
More accurate assessments include:
- Fibroscan (Transient Elastography): A non-invasive, painless test that measures liver stiffness (fibrosis) and fat content (CAP score) in minutes. This is the preferred tool before considering biopsy.
- Liver biopsy: The gold standard for staging NASH and fibrosis — reserved for cases where non-invasive tests are inconclusive.
- Blood tests: Liver function tests, lipid profile, HbA1c, thyroid function, and metabolic panel.
Can Fatty Liver Be Reversed?
Yes — Grade 1 and Grade 2 fatty liver are completely reversible. Grade 3 (NASH with fibrosis) can see significant improvement with sustained effort. Grade 4 cirrhosis is the exception — at this stage, management focuses on preventing further deterioration and monitoring for complications such as portal hypertension, liver cancer, and liver failure.
The most effective treatment remains lifestyle modification:
- Weight loss of 7–10% of body weight has been shown in clinical studies to reduce liver fat, inflammation, and fibrosis.
- Diet: Reduce refined carbohydrates, sugar, and saturated fats. Increase vegetables, whole grains, and lean protein. A Mediterranean-style diet has the strongest evidence base.
- Exercise: 150–300 minutes of moderate aerobic activity weekly, combined with resistance training.
- Alcohol: Complete abstinence is strongly recommended, even in NAFLD — alcohol accelerates fibrosis progression significantly.
- Manage metabolic conditions: Tight control of diabetes, cholesterol, and blood pressure directly improves liver outcomes.
Emerging Medications
While no drug is currently licensed specifically for NAFLD in India, several medications show benefit: Vitamin E (in non-diabetic NASH), GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide), and SGLT-2 inhibitors (used in diabetic patients) have shown meaningful reductions in liver fat and inflammation in clinical trials. Your gastroenterologist can guide whether any of these are appropriate for your specific case.
When Should You See a Gastroenterologist?
See a specialist if:
- Your ultrasound shows fatty liver, even without symptoms
- Your liver enzymes (SGPT/ALT) are persistently elevated
- You have diabetes, high cholesterol, or are overweight — these dramatically increase your NASH risk
- A Fibroscan shows elevated liver stiffness (≥ 7 kPa)
- You have a family history of liver disease or cirrhosis
Fatty liver is not a diagnosis to dismiss. It is a warning signal from your body — and acting on it early is the single most important thing you can do for your long-term liver health.
Dr. Tummalapalli S A Satya Maharshi is a Consultant Medical Gastroenterologist at AIG Hospitals, Hyderabad. He specialises in liver disease, advanced endoscopy, and gastroenterology care. To book a consultation, call +91 9963886339 or use the appointment form on this website.