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Environment, Endocrine Disruptors, and Fatty Liver Disease Associated with Metabolic Dysfunction (MASLD)

Antonella Mosca, Melania Manco, Maria Rita Braghini, Stefano Cianfarani, Giuseppe Maggiore, Anna Alisi, Andrea Vania

2024Metabolites29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ecological theories suggest that environmental factors significantly influence obesity risk and related syndemic morbidities, including metabolically abnormal obesity associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (MASLD). These factors encompass anthropogenic influences and endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), synergistically interacting to induce metabolic discrepancies, notably in early life, and disrupt metabolic processes in adulthood. This review focuses on endocrine disruptors affecting a child's MASLD risk, independent of their role as obesogens and thus regardless of their impact on adipogenesis. The liver plays a pivotal role in metabolic and detoxification processes, where various lipophilic endocrine-disrupting molecules accumulate in fatty liver parenchyma, exacerbating inflammation and functioning as new anthropogenics that perpetuate chronic low-grade inflammation, especially insulin resistance, crucial in the pathogenesis of MASLD.

Topics & Concepts

Nonalcoholic fatty liver diseaseEndocrine systemInsulin resistanceDetoxification (alternative medicine)ObesityInflammationFatty liverBiologyPathogenesisAdipose tissueDiseaseBioinformaticsMedicineEndocrinologyInternal medicinePhysiologyHormonePathologyAlternative medicineDiet and metabolism studiesEffects and risks of endocrine disrupting chemicalsAdipose Tissue and Metabolism
Environment, Endocrine Disruptors, and Fatty Liver Disease Associated with Metabolic Dysfunction (MASLD) | Litcius