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Alcohol-related Liver Disease

Liver damage from alcohol — spectrum, staging, and care for sustained recovery.

Overview

Alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) is liver damage from regular or heavy alcohol use, on a spectrum from simple fatty liver to alcoholic hepatitis, fibrosis, and cirrhosis. It is one of the leading causes of liver disease in India, often diagnosed late because early stages have no symptoms. Abstinence remains the single most important treatment — and the earlier it starts, the more reversible the damage.

Common symptoms

  • Often no symptoms in early stages
  • Fatigue and unexplained weight loss
  • Discomfort in the upper right abdomen
  • Jaundice (yellow skin and eyes)
  • Easy bruising or bleeding
  • Abdominal swelling, leg swelling, or confusion in advanced stages

When to see a doctor

See us if you drink regularly and have abnormal liver enzymes, abdominal symptoms, jaundice, or unexplained weight loss. Anyone with a history of heavy drinking — even after stopping — should have a one-time liver assessment because damage can persist silently.

How we help

We assess the stage of ALD with blood work, FibroScan, and ultrasound; liver biopsy is used in selected cases. The cornerstone of treatment is alcohol abstinence — we offer counselling and connect patients with addiction support where helpful. We also manage nutritional deficiencies (common in ALD), treat complications (variceal screening, ascites management), and provide structured surveillance for cirrhosis and liver cancer. Early-stage ALD is largely reversible with sustained abstinence.

This is general information, not a substitute for medical advice. For guidance specific to your case, please consult Dr. Ch. Saikumar or another qualified specialist.

Patient questions

Alcohol-related Liver Disease — common questions

Answers to the questions we hear most often about alcohol-related liver disease.

Can alcohol-related liver damage be reversed?
Fatty liver from alcohol is largely reversible with sustained abstinence. Fibrosis can partially regress. Cirrhosis is much harder to reverse, but stopping alcohol significantly slows progression and reduces complications at any stage.
How much alcohol causes liver damage?
Regular daily intake matters more than occasional binges. Over 20 g per day for women, 30 g per day for men, sustained for years, significantly increases risk. There's no truly 'safe' level for liver health.
What tests show alcohol-related liver damage?
Blood tests (AST, ALT, GGT, full liver panel), ultrasound, and FibroScan to assess fibrosis. We look for specific patterns suggesting alcohol as the cause and rule out overlapping conditions like viral hepatitis.
Does stopping drinking always help?
Yes — abstinence is the single most effective treatment, at every stage. Even in advanced cirrhosis, stopping alcohol meaningfully improves outcomes and life expectancy.
I find it hard to stop drinking — what can help?
Alcohol dependence is medical, not moral. We can prescribe medications (acamprosate, naltrexone, baclofen) that reduce cravings, and connect you with counselling or support programmes. The hardest part is often starting — we'll help.