In alcoholic fatty liver, over consumption of alcohol changes the way that the liver breaks down and st. john’s mercy hospital stores fats. Often, people with chronic alcoholism also suffer from malnutrition by eating irregularly st. john’s mercy hospital and not consuming a balanced diet. Conditions that can also cause fatty liver are other forms of malnutrition (especially when there st. john’s mercy hospital is not enough protein in the diet), obesity, diabetes mellitus, and Reye's syndrome in children. Pregnancy can cause a rare, but serious form of fatty liver that starts late in pregnancy and may be associated with jaundice and liver failure. Some drug overdoses or toxic chemical poisonings, such as carbon tetrachloride, can also cause fatty liver. Often, there are no symptoms associated with fatty liver. If there are symptoms, they can include pain under the rib cage on the right side of the body, swelling of the abdomen, jaundice, and fever. Symptoms that occur less often in alcoholic fatty liver, but more often in pregnancy related fatty liver, are nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, and abdominal pain.
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