
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
(This episode has been reposted to include the complete conversation content.)
Louise Campbell and Roger Green join co-authors Stephen Harrison, Naim Alkhouri and first-time guest Prof. Samer Gowrieh to dive deeper into key findings from the 2021 Journal of Hepatology paper titled "Prospective evaluation of the prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis in a large middle-aged US cohort."
A deeper dive into the data coming from the 2021 Journal of Hepatology paper "Prospective evaluation of the prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis in a large middle-aged US cohort" reveals several troubling trends, including percentages of patients with F2/F3 NASH increasing far faster than the overall NAFLD growth rate and population subgroups in which a majority of the study patients exhibited NAFLD and over one in three exhibited NASH. Whether you are familiar with the paper or not, you will want to listen to this conversation to hear points you might have missed.
By SurfingNASH.com3.9
2424 ratings
Send us a text
(This episode has been reposted to include the complete conversation content.)
Louise Campbell and Roger Green join co-authors Stephen Harrison, Naim Alkhouri and first-time guest Prof. Samer Gowrieh to dive deeper into key findings from the 2021 Journal of Hepatology paper titled "Prospective evaluation of the prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis in a large middle-aged US cohort."
A deeper dive into the data coming from the 2021 Journal of Hepatology paper "Prospective evaluation of the prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis in a large middle-aged US cohort" reveals several troubling trends, including percentages of patients with F2/F3 NASH increasing far faster than the overall NAFLD growth rate and population subgroups in which a majority of the study patients exhibited NAFLD and over one in three exhibited NASH. Whether you are familiar with the paper or not, you will want to listen to this conversation to hear points you might have missed.

32,304 Listeners

30,807 Listeners

9,749 Listeners

104 Listeners

21,250 Listeners

3,375 Listeners

113,521 Listeners

57,033 Listeners

9,577 Listeners

8,704 Listeners

10,275 Listeners

6,470 Listeners

0 Listeners

419 Listeners

683 Listeners