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Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the hepatic manifestation of insulin resistance. It is not a liver disease that happens to coexist with metabolic dysfunction; it is a direct consequence of chronically elevated insulin driving hepatic lipogenesis, converting excess dietary carbohydrate into triglycerides that accumulate in liver cells. NAFLD is present in up to 80 percent of patients with obesity and type 2 diabetes, and it is rapidly becoming the leading cause of liver transplantation. It is also fully reversible in its early stages when the metabolic driver is identified and treated.

Metabolic HealthInsulin ResistanceReversible
~25%of the global adult population has NAFLD
80%of NAFLD patients have underlying insulin resistance
Reversiblein early stages with aggressive metabolic and dietary intervention
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Condition: Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease  |  Category: Metabolic Health  |  Reviewed by: Brian Lamkin, DO

What Is Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease?

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the accumulation of excess fat in liver cells in the absence of significant alcohol consumption. It exists on a spectrum from simple steatosis (fat accumulation without inflammation) to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), in which hepatic fat accumulation triggers inflammatory damage, fibrosis, and, if unaddressed, progression to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma.

The primary driver in the overwhelming majority of NAFLD cases is insulin resistance. Chronically elevated insulin activates hepatic de novo lipogenesis, the metabolic pathway that converts excess dietary carbohydrate, particularly fructose, into triglycerides that are stored in hepatocytes. The liver becomes a fat-producing organ rather than a fat-clearing organ. This mechanism explains why NAFLD is present in up to 80 percent of patients with type 2 diabetes and is tightly correlated with visceral adiposity, dyslipidemia, and the metabolic syndrome cluster.

Key principle: NAFLD is not caused by dietary fat. It is caused by dietary carbohydrate, particularly fructose, being converted to fat by a liver that has been instructed to do so by chronically elevated insulin. Treating NAFLD as a fat intake problem is biochemically incorrect and produces inadequate clinical results. Treating it as an insulin and carbohydrate problem produces resolution.

Why It Matters

Progression Risk

  • 20 to 30 percent of NAFLD patients progress to NASH, which involves hepatic inflammation and cellular damage that can advance to fibrosis and cirrhosis
  • NAFLD is rapidly becoming the leading cause of liver transplantation in the United States, surpassing hepatitis C and alcoholic liver disease
  • Cardiovascular disease, not liver failure, is the leading cause of death in NAFLD patients because the same insulin resistance driving hepatic fat accumulation drives atherosclerosis
  • NAFLD impairs the liver's detoxification capacity, reducing Phase I and Phase II clearance of hormones, medications, and environmental toxins

Why Standard Care Falls Short

  • Liver enzymes (ALT, AST) can be normal in early NAFLD, providing false reassurance. Up to 80 percent of patients with ultrasonographic fatty liver have normal ALT levels
  • "Lose weight and exercise" is the standard recommendation without identifying or treating the insulin resistance, gut dysbiosis, or oxidative stress driving the hepatic fat accumulation
  • No FDA-approved medication for NAFLD exists in conventional practice, leading to a monitoring and waiting approach during the stage when intervention is most effective
  • Fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, and gut health are not assessed despite being the most actionable markers for identifying and reversing the metabolic mechanism

Common Symptoms

Hepatic

  • Often asymptomatic in early stages, diagnosed incidentally
  • Right upper quadrant fullness or mild discomfort
  • Elevated ALT or GGT on routine bloodwork
  • Hepatomegaly (enlarged liver) detected on imaging

Metabolic

  • Fatigue and low energy from impaired hepatic metabolic function
  • Difficulty losing weight despite dietary effort
  • Elevated triglycerides and low HDL on lipid panel
  • Fasting glucose creeping upward as hepatic insulin resistance worsens

Systemic Consequences

  • Impaired detoxification of hormones, medications, and toxins
  • Worsening estrogen clearance contributing to hormonal imbalance
  • Increased systemic inflammation from hepatic cytokine release
  • Accelerated cardiovascular risk independent of traditional lipid values

Root Causes: A Functional Medicine Perspective

Conventional hepatology diagnoses NAFLD by ultrasound and monitors liver enzymes. Functional medicine asks what is driving the hepatic fat accumulation and treats the upstream mechanism.

Insulin Resistance and Hepatic De Novo Lipogenesis

The dominant driver. Elevated fasting insulin activates the transcription factor SREBP-1c, which upregulates the enzymes responsible for converting carbohydrate to fat in the liver. This pathway is particularly sensitive to fructose, which bypasses normal glycolytic regulation and is channeled directly into hepatic lipogenesis. HOMA-IR above 1.9 confirms the insulin resistance driving this process.

Visceral Adiposity and Portal Free Fatty Acids

Visceral fat drains directly into the portal circulation, delivering a continuous supply of free fatty acids to the liver. This is why abdominal obesity is more strongly correlated with NAFLD than total body weight. Reducing visceral fat through insulin sensitization and body composition optimization directly reduces hepatic fatty acid delivery.

Gut Dysbiosis and Intestinal Permeability

Gut dysbiosis increases intestinal permeability, allowing lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and other bacterial products to translocate into the portal circulation and activate hepatic Kupffer cells (liver macrophages). This produces hepatic inflammation that compounds the steatosis and accelerates progression from simple fatty liver to NASH. The gut-liver axis is a primary therapeutic target in functional NAFLD management.

Oxidative Stress and Mitochondrial Dysfunction

Hepatic fat accumulation overwhelms mitochondrial beta-oxidation capacity, producing reactive oxygen species that damage hepatocyte membranes, activate stellate cells (the cells responsible for fibrosis), and impair the liver's detoxification pathways. Antioxidant support and mitochondrial optimization are essential components of NAFLD treatment beyond dietary intervention.

Conventional vs Functional Medicine Approach

DomainConventional MedicineFunctional Medicine
DiagnosisUltrasound, ALT/AST monitoring; liver biopsy for stagingFasting insulin, HOMA-IR, triglyceride/HDL ratio, GGT, hs-CRP, and gut health assessment alongside imaging
TreatmentGeneral weight loss advice; no FDA-approved medication; monitoringInsulin sensitization, fructose elimination, gut-liver axis restoration, targeted hepatoprotective supplementation
MonitoringSerial liver enzymes and imagingFasting insulin trend, HOMA-IR normalization, triglyceride/HDL ratio improvement, and inflammatory marker resolution
Root causeNot specifically investigatedInsulin resistance, dietary fructose load, gut permeability, oxidative stress, and visceral adiposity assessed individually

Key Labs to Evaluate

NAFLD evaluation requires metabolic markers that identify the driver of hepatic fat accumulation, not just confirmation that fat is present.

How to Interpret These Labs Together

Elevated fasting insulin with HOMA-IR above 2.5 and triglyceride/HDL ratio above 3.0 is the metabolic NAFLD signature: the liver is actively converting carbohydrate to fat under insulin's instruction, and the triglycerides being produced are appearing in the bloodstream as elevated serum triglycerides with reduced HDL. This pattern precedes and predicts ultrasonographic evidence of fatty liver.

Elevated GGT with normal ALT identifies hepatic oxidative stress as a component of NAFLD that standard liver enzyme panels miss. GGT is a more sensitive marker of early hepatic damage and is independently associated with cardiovascular mortality in NAFLD patients.

Elevated hs-CRP alongside elevated fasting insulin identifies the inflammatory-metabolic NAFLD pattern at highest risk for progression to NASH. Anti-inflammatory intervention is indicated alongside insulin sensitization to reduce hepatic inflammatory signaling.

Common Patterns Seen in Patients

  • The patient with normal liver enzymes and fatty liver on ultrasound: ALT 28, AST 24 (both within range). Ultrasound shows moderate hepatic steatosis. Told "labs are fine, just lose some weight." Fasting insulin 19, HOMA-IR 4.5, triglyceride/HDL ratio 4.8. The insulin resistance driving hepatic fat was never identified because liver enzymes were normal. Insulin sensitization through dietary modification and berberine produced resolution of steatosis on repeat ultrasound within 6 months.
  • The thin patient with fatty liver: BMI 24, not overweight. Fatty liver found incidentally on imaging. Assumed to be an error. Fasting insulin 14, visceral fat on DEXA elevated despite normal BMI. "Lean NAFLD" driven by metabolic dysfunction independent of total body weight. Dietary fructose reduction and insulin sensitization resolved the steatosis.
  • The patient told to follow a low-fat diet: Recommended a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet for fatty liver. Triglycerides increased, fatty liver worsened. The dietary carbohydrate, particularly fructose, was being converted directly to hepatic fat by the same insulin-driven lipogenesis pathway the diet was meant to address. Switching to a low-glycemic, adequate-fat dietary pattern produced immediate triglyceride reduction and progressive hepatic fat clearance.
  • NAFLD with concurrent estrogen metabolism impairment: Fatty liver reducing Phase I and Phase II detoxification capacity. Estrogen clearance impaired, producing symptoms of estrogen dominance. Treating the NAFLD restored liver detoxification function and improved the hormonal imbalance concurrently.

Treatment and Optimization Strategy

Dietary and Metabolic Foundation

The highest-impact intervention for NAFLD is dietary: eliminating the substrates that drive hepatic lipogenesis (fructose, refined carbohydrates, seed oils) and reducing the hormonal signal that activates it (insulin). This is not a low-fat diet. It is a low-glycemic, adequate-fat, protein-anchored nutritional strategy that directly addresses the metabolic mechanism.

Dietary and Lifestyle Interventions

  • Complete elimination of added fructose including high-fructose corn syrup, concentrated fruit juices, and agave as the single highest-impact dietary change
  • Low-glycemic, protein-anchored nutrition eliminating processed carbohydrates, refined seed oils, and added sugars
  • Time-restricted eating (8 to 10 hour window) to reduce total daily insulin exposure and extend fasting-state hepatic fat oxidation
  • Resistance training 3 to 4 times weekly to increase GLUT-4 expression and improve hepatic insulin sensitivity independent of weight loss

Clinical and Hepatoprotective Support

  • Berberine (500mg twice daily) for AMPK activation, insulin sensitization, and direct hepatoprotective effect; reduces hepatic fat content in clinical trials
  • NAC (N-acetylcysteine, 600 to 1200mg daily) for glutathione repletion and hepatic antioxidant defense
  • Milk thistle (silymarin, 420mg daily) for hepatocyte membrane stabilization and anti-inflammatory effect
  • Omega-3 fatty acids (3 to 4g EPA+DHA daily) for anti-inflammatory hepatic effect and triglyceride reduction

What Most Doctors Miss

  • Normal liver enzymes do not exclude NAFLD: up to 80 percent of patients with ultrasonographic fatty liver have normal ALT. Relying on liver enzymes alone produces massive underdiagnosis.
  • Fasting insulin is not measured: the primary metabolic driver of hepatic fat accumulation is not part of standard NAFLD evaluation. Without fasting insulin and HOMA-IR, the mechanism is invisible.
  • Low-fat dietary advice worsens NAFLD: replacing dietary fat with carbohydrate increases the substrate for hepatic de novo lipogenesis. NAFLD is a carbohydrate metabolism problem, not a dietary fat problem.
  • The gut-liver axis is not assessed: intestinal permeability and LPS translocation from gut dysbiosis are independent drivers of hepatic inflammation that standard hepatology does not evaluate or treat.

When to Seek Medical Care

If you have been diagnosed with fatty liver on imaging, have elevated liver enzymes without a clear explanation, have metabolic syndrome or insulin resistance with abdominal obesity, or have unexplained fatigue with elevated triglycerides, a comprehensive metabolic evaluation of your liver health is warranted.

At The Lamkin Clinic, NAFLD evaluation includes fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, triglyceride/HDL ratio, GGT, hs-CRP, hepatic function markers, and gut health assessment, reviewed together as an integrated metabolic and hepatic profile.

Recommended Testing

NAFLD evaluation requires metabolic testing that identifies the driver of hepatic fat accumulation, not just confirmation that fat is present on imaging.

Foundational Labs

  • Fasting Insulin
  • HOMA-IR
  • HbA1c
  • Triglycerides / HDL Ratio

Advanced Assessment

  • ALT, AST, GGT
  • hs-CRP
  • Ferritin
  • Uric Acid
  • Adiponectin

Not sure which testing applies to you?

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can fatty liver be reversed?

Yes. NAFLD (simple steatosis) is fully reversible with dietary and metabolic intervention. Even NASH can be significantly improved when insulin resistance is resolved, dietary triggers are eliminated, and hepatic inflammation is reduced. The key is addressing the metabolic driver rather than simply monitoring liver enzymes over time.

What causes fatty liver if I do not drink alcohol?

The primary driver is insulin resistance. Chronically elevated insulin activates hepatic de novo lipogenesis, the metabolic pathway that converts excess dietary carbohydrate (particularly fructose) into triglycerides stored in liver cells. Visceral adiposity, gut dysbiosis, and oxidative stress compound the hepatic fat accumulation. This mechanism is entirely independent of alcohol consumption.

Is fatty liver dangerous?

Simple hepatic steatosis is reversible and not immediately dangerous. However, if the metabolic drivers remain unaddressed, approximately 20 to 30 percent of NAFLD patients progress to NASH, which involves hepatic inflammation and can advance to fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. NAFLD is rapidly becoming the leading indication for liver transplantation.

What labs indicate fatty liver?

Elevated ALT is the most commonly identified marker, though liver enzymes can be normal in early NAFLD. Fasting insulin and HOMA-IR identify the insulin resistance driving hepatic lipogenesis. An elevated triglyceride-to-HDL ratio strongly suggests hepatic fat accumulation. GGT elevation indicates hepatic oxidative stress. A comprehensive metabolic panel provides a more complete picture than liver enzymes alone.

Does fructose cause fatty liver?

Fructose is uniquely hepatotoxic in excess. Unlike glucose, fructose is metabolized almost exclusively by the liver and bypasses normal glycolytic regulation. Excess fructose is converted directly to triglycerides through hepatic de novo lipogenesis. Eliminating added fructose (including high-fructose corn syrup and concentrated fruit juices) is one of the highest-impact dietary interventions for NAFLD.

How The Lamkin Clinic Approaches Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Clinical Perspective
Fatty liver is not a liver problem. It is a metabolic problem that the liver expresses. When a patient comes to me with NAFLD, the first thing I measure is fasting insulin, not liver enzymes. If the insulin is elevated, I know exactly why the liver is accumulating fat and exactly how to reverse it. The dietary strategy is straightforward: eliminate the fructose and refined carbohydrates that the liver is converting to fat, reduce the insulin that is instructing it to do so, and support hepatic detoxification and repair. Most patients show measurable improvement on repeat imaging within 3 to 6 months.

Brian Lamkin, DO | Founder, The Lamkin Clinic | Edmond, Oklahoma

At The Lamkin Clinic, NAFLD evaluation begins with comprehensive metabolic testing: fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, triglyceride/HDL ratio, GGT, hs-CRP, and gut health markers. We identify the specific metabolic mechanism driving hepatic fat accumulation and build a treatment protocol targeting insulin reduction, dietary optimization, gut-liver axis restoration, and hepatoprotective support. The goal is metabolic resolution, not monitoring.

Related Conditions

Related Symptoms

Fatty liver is the liver's expression of a metabolic problem that is identifiable and reversible.

The Lamkin Clinic evaluates NAFLD with fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, triglyceride/HDL ratio, and comprehensive metabolic testing. Schedule a consultation for a root-cause hepatic and metabolic evaluation.

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Medical Disclaimer: This content is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Lab interpretation should always be performed in clinical context by a qualified healthcare provider. Reference ranges and optimal targets may vary based on individual patient history, clinical presentation, and laboratory methodology. Schedule a consultation to discuss your specific results with Dr. Lamkin.

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