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. Chapters 0:00 Introduction 0:05 What is Liver Pain? 0:12 What causes liver Pain 0:19 Infection 0:44 medication Abuse 1:02 Alcohol Abuse 1:20 Autoimmune Diseases 1:37 Fatty Liver 1:56 Cancer 2:06 How to stop Liver pain 2:12 Healthy Diet 2:32 Stay Hydrated 2:56 Infection Liver disease, or hepatic disease, is any of many diseases of the liver.[1] If long-lasting it is termed chronic liver disease.[3] Although the diseases differ in detail, liver diseases often have features in common. Some of the signs and symptoms of a liver disease are the following: Jaundice[4] Confusion and altered consciousness caused by hepatic encephalopathy.[5] Thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy.[6] Risk of bleeding symptoms particularly taking place in gastrointestinal tract[There are more than a hundred different liver diseases. Some of the most common are:[8] Fascioliasis, a parasitic infection of liver caused by a liver fluke of the genus Fasciola, mostly Fasciola hepatica.[9] Hepatitis, inflammation of the liver, is caused by various viruses (viral hepatitis) also by some liver toxins (e.g. alcoholic hepatitis), autoimmunity (autoimmune hepatitis) or hereditary conditions.[10] Alcoholic liver disease is a hepatic manifestation of alcohol overconsumption, including fatty liver disease, alcoholic hepatitis, and cirrhosis. Analogous terms such as "drug-induced" or "toxic" liver disease are also used to refer to disorders caused by various drugs.[11] Fatty liver disease (hepatic steatosis) is a reversible condition where large vacuoles of triglyceride fat accumulate in liver cells.[12] Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is a spectrum of disease associated with obesity and metabolic syndrome.[13] Hereditary diseases that cause damage to the liver include hemochromatosis,[14] involving accumulation of iron in the body, and Wilson's disease. Liver damage is also a clinical feature of alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency[15] and glycogen storage disease type II.[16] In transthyretin-related hereditary amyloidosis, the liver produces a mutated transthyretin protein which has severe neurodegenerative or cardiopathic effects. Liver transplantation can be curative.[17]