DWQA QuestionsCategory: Extraterrestrial InterlopersDiabetes and alcoholism can lead to liver failure. What percent of hepatic cirrhosis cases are actually the result of an aggravating chronic virus infection?
Nicola Staff asked 4 months ago
This is fully 95% of cases. The metabolic and physiologic changes with diabetes and with alcoholism to be focused on the liver, one of the most resilient and hardy organs from the standpoint of redundancy, and having a large excess, at least from youth, to withstand the stresses and strains over time in handling many toxic materials for their elimination, shows that given the ability even to regenerate, many times means that something serious is happening. When the liver enters a serious decline that becomes life-threatening, it is truly the presence of chronic virus most of the time. That makes the liver a point of vulnerability to alcohol and in the case of diabetes it is not excess glucose levels, as presumed by science, causing a chronic irritation but a corresponding virus in the liver in addition to the pancreas producing parallel degradation of cell health and function that worsens over time and can lead to organ failure.