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Show 1429: How to Love Your Liver and Protect its Superpowers

In this episode learn how to love your liver: avoid ultra-processed food, alcohol and excess acetaminophen. Drink black coffee!

This week, Joe and Terry discuss liver health with two specialists. You may not have spent much time thinking about your liver. It is, however, an absolutely essential organ. When the liver is working properly, every part of the body gets the nutrients it needs and no parts are exposed to damaging toxins. These are among its superpowers. Find out why you should love your liver.

You could listen through your local public radio station or get the live stream on Saturday, May 3, 2025, at 7 am EDT on your computer or smart phone (wunc.org). Here is a link  so you can find which stations carry our broadcast. If you can’t listen to the broadcast, you may wish to hear the podcast later. You can subscribe through your favorite podcast provider, download the mp3 using the link at the bottom of the page, or listen to the stream on this post starting on May 5, 2025.

Love Your Liver:

Nutrients don’t go directly from the intestines to the rest of the body. Instead, they pass through the liver first. There, this master organ breaks them down into compounds that can be recognized and utilized by individual tissues and cells. Moreover, if it finds nasty chemicals that shouldn’t be there, it utilizes its superpowers to transform them into less damaging compounds that can be more readily excreted.

You should also love your liver because it can store nutrients for unanticipated periods of fasting and hold off starvation. This was a tremendous benefit during earlier periods of human evolution. These days, we have less need for a hedge against starvation. In fact, when we overload our livers with alcohol or sugar, even its superpowers may not be adequate. The liver’s response to this kind of insult is fibrosis, a condition in which it stiffens and stores fat.

Liver Disease:

One of the liver’s superpowers is that it can regenerate itself so long as we remove the source of injury. That’s pretty remarkable! But what if we keep on eating ultra-processed foods (Nutrients, May 10, 2023) and drinking soda or alcohol?  In that case, the liver continues to try to repair itself. That can change the architecture of the tiny blood vessels that run through the liver, raising the pressure within them and ultimately leading to serious complications. Fatty liver disease, correctly termed metabolic-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), is the first step; cirrhosis and ultimately liver failure might follow.

How Do You Know If Your Liver Is Healthy?

The liver is so effective at maintaining the body in balance that most people don’t develop symptoms of trouble until liver disease is quite advanced. As a result, the best way to keep tabs on liver health is through blood tests. Tests for the liver enzymes called ALT and AST are common and often used to assess liver health.

Agents That Can Help or Harm the Liver:

If you love your liver, consider drinking a cup or two of black coffee daily. This has been shown to help the liver fight inflammation and overcome early-stage liver fibrosis (Redox Biology, March 2025).

Another precaution to take: avoid excess acetaminophen. This is the pain-relieving ingredient in Tylenol and hundreds of other over-the-counter medications. Doctors consider it safe for occasional use at doses under 4,000 mg in a day. Chronic use might call for lower doses yet. Because it is so widespread, people may mistakenly take several different medicines containing acetaminophen (paracetamol in the rest of the world) and end up exceeding the maximum dose by accident. Liver experts like our guest Dr. Ahmad treat such emergencies with a medicine called N-acetylcysteine.

Other pain relievers, such as NSAIDs, are less likely than acetaminophen to damage the liver. Dangerous reactions to such drugs are unpredictable, however, which can make them harder to manage. Fluoroquinolone antibiotics such as Levaquin and corticosteroids like methylprednisolone also fall into this category. Oral antifungal drugs can also be very hard on the liver.

Herbs That Can Challenge the Liver:

Pharmaceuticals are not the only compounds that may test the liver’s detoxifying superpowers. Botanical medicines can also cause challenges. Dr. Ahmad has treated people whose liver injuries were caused by green tea extract, turmeric, kratom or ashwagandha. Most people taking such supplements are attempting to improve their health, so discovering that instead they have developed liver damage is a nasty surprise. If you love your liver, stick with drinking green tea and eating curry rather than taking pills with concentrated extracts.

This Week’s Guests:

Meena Bansal, MD, is Professor of Medicine, specializing in liver diseases, at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. She is System Chief of the Division of Liver Diseases and Director of the MASH/NASH Center of Excellence at Mount Sinai.

Dr. Meena Bansal stands in hallway at Mount Sinai

Meena Bansal, MD, Professor of Medicine Mt. Sinai, photo courtesy of Mt. Sinai

Jawad Ahmad, MD, is a professor of liver diseases at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine. He is co Primary Investigator on the NIH/NIDDK research initiative to study cases of severe liver injury caused by prescription drugs, over-the-counter drugs, and alternative medicines, such as herbal products and supplements.

For more information on the Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) visit: https://researchfunding.duke.edu/drug-induced-liver-injury-network-dilin-clinical-centers-u01-clinical-trial-optional

Jawad Ahmad, MD, Professor of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Jawad Ahmad, MD, Professor of Medicine at Mount Sinai, photo courtesy of Mt. Sinai

Listen to the Podcast:

The podcast of this program will be available Monday, May 5, 2025, after broadcast on May 3. You can stream the show from this site and download the podcast for free.

Citations
  • Henney AE et al, "Ultra-processed food intake Is associated with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis." Nutrients, May 10, 2023. DOI: 10.3390/nu15102266
  • Xin X et al, "Caffeine ameliorates metabolic-associated steatohepatitis by rescuing hepatic Dusp9." Redox Biology, March 2025. DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2025.103499
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About the Author
Terry Graedon, PhD, is a medical anthropologist and co-host of The People’s Pharmacy radio show, co-author of The People’s Pharmacy syndicated newspaper columns and numerous books, and co-founder of The People’s Pharmacy website. Terry taught in the Duke University School of Nursing and was an adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology. She is a Fellow of the Society of Applied Anthropology. Terry is one of the country's leading authorities on the science behind folk remedies..
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