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on-alcoholic fatty liver disease and liver regneration in liver transplantation donors

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Diseases of the digestive system
Registration Number
KCT0005181
Lead Sponsor
Gachon University Gil Medical Center
Brief Summary

Not available

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
Not yet recruiting
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria

A person who voluntarily decides to participate as a participant and agrees in writing to comply with the precautions after hearing and fully understanding the overall description of this clinical study.
19 years old or older, 60 years old or younger
A person determined by the liver transplant center as a living donor for liver transplantation

Exclusion Criteria

People under 19 and over 60
Drug abusers
In the past 2 years, if the average daily drinking amount exceeded 30g for men (approximately 3 glasses of soju) and 20g for women (approximately 2 glasses of soju)
Those who are unable to handle the noise or sequestration environment in the MRI laboratory or who are contraindicated in MRI study (e.g., iron implants or device holders in the body, artificial pacemakers, blood vessel clips, practitioners inserting artifacts into the eyes or ears, and other magnetic effects) Those who have a foreign body that can receive it)
History of using drugs that cause secondary fatty liver within the last year (corticosteroids, tamoxifen, amiodarone, methotrexate, etc.)
Subjects whose systemic status is judged clinically to be inappropriate for participation in the study

Study & Design

Study Type
Observational Study
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Correlation between the degrees of steatosis and fibrosis in donor liver before liver transplantation and the degree of regeneration of residual donor liver at 3 months after transplantation
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Factors related with a delay or an augmentation of liver tissue regeneration 3 months after liver donation surgery as a result of genomic analysis of basal liver tissue;Identification of circulating factors that promote physiological liver tissue regeneration
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