A common chemical used in dry cleaning and for certain consumer products called tetrachloroethylene (PCE) may triple a person's risk for liver fibrosis, a new study reports.
WASHINGTON -- Liver cancer risk after hepatitis C virus (HCV) cure was significantly greater in patients with metabolic ...
Tetrachloroethylene exposure from everyday products increases liver fibrosis odds by 300%. The EPA restricted the chemical ...
Liver disease, a significant health concern, progresses from potentially reversible fibrosis to irreversible cirrhosis. While early fibrosis often sh ...
Data from the phase 2 IMPACT study indicate improvements in early and advanced fibrosis according to an AI algorithm.
A chemical found in dry cleaning solutions and common household items triples the risk of severe liver damage, according to ...
Scientists have uncovered a new environmental culprit behind liver disease: tetrachloroethylene (PCE), a chemical used in dry ...
A chemical commonly found in consumer products and used in dry cleaning has been shown to triple the risk of liver fibrosis.
Scientists from the Keck Medicine Center at the University of Southern California have learned that the chemical tetrachloroethylene, widely used in dry cleaning and found in household products such ...
Henna dye may do more than colour hair. A Japanese study found that a natural compound in the henna plant could help reverse liver damage and repair liver fibrosis.