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Liver Disease And COVID-19: Why Hispanics Might Be Particularly At Risk

As the COVID-19 caseload climbs, it’s becoming clear that some groups are more at risk than others. Early research out of the Fresno region shows one family of diseases may make Hispanics particularly vulnerable. The family is liver diseases. Dr. Marina Roytman, a liver specialist at UCSF Fresno and Community Regional Medical Center, says people with liver conditions generally can’t handle the disease as well as others. “Clearly…we are seeing the correlation that underlying liver disease is predictive of a more severe COVID course,” she says. In the U.S., Hispanics appear to be more genetically predisposed than other ethnic groups to one liver ailment in particular: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, which is marked by a buildup of fat in the liver and can progress to more serious conditions like cirrhosis and liver failure. Roytman is studying outcomes among hundreds of COVID patients alongside researchers across the country. “Certainly in our cohort of data, we see a huge
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