Liver Degenerative Disease


The liver is located on the right side of the body, in the upper abdomen. In humans, it is the second largest organ of the body, weighing about 4 pounds (lbs.) (skin is the largest organ). Even while exposed to tremendous potential for damage, the liver performs a multitude of essential functions: metabolizing, detoxifying, and regenerating. It does an extraordinary job of keeping us alive and healthy by metabolizing the food we eat (ie, breaking it down into useful parts) and protecting us from the damaging effects of numerous toxic compounds we are exposed to on a daily basis. Several times each day, our entire blood supply passes through the liver. At any given time, about a pint of blood is in the liver (or 10% of the total blood volume of an adult) (NIDDK 2000). In addition, the liver has impressive restorative capabilities and is the only organ in the body capable of regenerating itself when part of it has been damaged.


 
Liver damage caused by degenerative conditions is irreversible. There are no commonly accepted, effective, conventional drug therapy regimes to prevent or reverse liver damage. Treatment primarily consists of identifying the underlying cause(s), determining possible steps to slow or stop progression of degeneration, and manage symptoms. One causal factor is alcohol: stopping alcohol intake will help stop progression. Ending the use of hepatotoxic drugs and removing sources of environmental toxins will also stop progression. The possible presence of metabolic diseases (eg, hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease) should be investigated. Identifying the presence of hepatitis viruses is essential. Because obesity plays an important role in fatty liver, attention to weight control is essential.

Itching is a very troublesome symptom for patients with liver disease. It is also a very difficult symptom to manage for physicians. The reason why patients with liver disease itch is not understood. One thought is that certain substances accumulate in the blood as a result of liver disease and cause itching. The nature of these substances is under investigation, but some evidence suggests that normal substances found in blood plasma (eg, endogenous opioids known as enkaphalins) for some unknown reason cause itching in liver disease patients. 
Glutathione is involved in many cellular processes, including cell differentiation, proliferation and apoptosis (death). The mitochondria in your cells make “free radicals” along with the energy they produce. If you’re deficient in Glutathione, your mitochondria are the first parts to be damaged. Unchecked free radicals also lead to degenerative diseases and aging.
Glutathione is needed by the liver in order to carry out its detoxification processes. all those
modern chemicals, toxins and medications put a huge burden on our livers and handling them depletes glutahtione  stores. your liver also needs glutahtione to make bile, which is essential for digestion and the breakdown of fats.
Glutathione is essential for our immune system function, especially cell-mediated immunity. Infection, exercise and toxins all deplete glutathione and can trigger mitochondrial dysfunction. This explains why people with chronic infections may develop severe fatigue and other types of chronic health problems.  glutahtione is essential for the production and responses of key immune system proteins like interleukin (il)-2 and the activity of killer cells. glutahtione alsoreduces inflammation, which we’ve learned is a silent killer.

it is essential to many other processes, including cellular redox homeostasis, oxygen transport, protection of dna, amino acid transport, protection of b12inside the cells and the removal of heavy metals.


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