Imagine walking into a doctor's office and having a simple blood test that could flag a hidden liver problem. That is the hope behind this new look at nutrition scores. Researchers examined over 10,000 Chinese adults to see if three specific nutritional markers could predict metabolic-associated fatty liver disease, or MAFLD. This condition involves fat building up in the liver, often without pain or obvious warning signs.
The study compared people with the disease to those without it. Those with the lowest nutritional scores faced a massive jump in risk. Specifically, people with the worst scores on one key marker had seven times the risk of having fatty liver disease compared to those with the best scores. Another marker showed an 1.8 times higher risk for those with low scores.
The tests worked best for younger adults, women, and people with a healthy body weight. Interestingly, the link between these nutrition scores and liver disease was even stronger in young adults who did not have high blood sugar or high cholesterol. Yet, because the study only looked at data collected at one time, we cannot say for sure that low nutrition scores caused the liver disease.
This research offers a potential new way for doctors to screen for MAFLD early. It suggests that looking at how well a person is nourished might help catch the problem sooner. But remember, this is a connection found in past records, not a guarantee that changing your diet will fix the disease or prevent it in every case.