Hepatic fibrosis

Hepatic fibrosis is an increase in the connective tissue in the liver tissue (more precisely in the space of Disse). It is a process that precedes liver cirrhosis. Liver cirrhosis develops on average in 15-20 years.

Etiology
Liver fibrosis is caused by processes that lead to chronic liver damage. For example:

The process is started by activation of hepatic stellate cells located in space of Disse. This activation is triggered by paracrine-released mediators from damaged hepatocytes, activated Kupffer cells and immune system cells (mainly growth factors TGF-β and PDGF and the cytokines IL-17, IL-22 and IL-33). Activation is associated with the loss of vitamin A (which they store at rest), with the expression of smooth muscle´s actin and their conversion to myofibroblasts. Activated stellate cells (myofibroblasts) subsequently produce collagen (especially collagen I and III) and other components of the extracellular matrix.
 * chronic hepatitis (HBV, HCV, autoimmune hepatitis),
 * alcohol abuse,
 * schistosomiasis,
 * non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH),
 * cholestasis and others.

Reversibility
Previously, the prevailing view was that liver fibrosis is an irreversible process. However, it was found to be reversible. After removing the cause of fibrosis, some of the activated stellate cells undergo apoptosis and the rest return to a "rest state." Hepatic macrophages subsequently produce matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) enzymes, which are involved in the degradation of multiplied connective tissue.

Diagnosis

 * medical imaging methods- ultrasonography, CT, MRI (all are non-specific and relatively unreliable)
 * liver biopsy