Characterization of diet based nonalcoholic fatty liver disease/nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in rodent models: Histological and biochemical outcomes

Histol Histopathol. 2022 Sep;37(9):813-824. doi: 10.14670/HH-18-462. Epub 2022 Apr 27.

Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), as the most common chronic liver disease, is rapidly increasing worldwide. This complex disorder can include simple liver steatosis to more serious stages of nonalcoholic fibrosis and steatohepatitis (NASH). One of the critical concerns in NASH research is selecting and confiding in relying on preclinical animal models and experimental methods that can accurately reflect the situation in human NASH. Recently, creating nutritional models of NASH with a closer dietary pattern in human has been providing reliable, simple, and reproducible tools that hope to create a better landscape for showing the recapitulation of disease pathophysiology. This review focuses on recent research on rodent models (mice, rats, and hamsters) in the induction of the dietary model of NAFLD /NASH. This research tries to compile the different dietary compositions of NASH, time frames required for disease development, and their impact on liver histological features as well as metabolic parameters.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Diet
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Humans
  • Liver / pathology
  • Liver Cirrhosis / pathology
  • Mice
  • Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease* / pathology
  • Rats
  • Rodentia