12 Signs of Liver Disease You Should Not Ignore
Most people do not know their liver is in trouble until late. The liver is remarkable at compensating for damage — until it can’t. By the time obvious symptoms appear, damage is often already advanced.
Here are the early warning signs every clinician and patient should recognize before liver disease progresses to a life-threatening stage.
1. Persistent fatigue that rest does not fix
Fatigue is the most common and earliest symptom. Patients often describe it as feeling wiped out even after a full night of sleep. It is easy to dismiss, but when it persists for weeks and interferes with daily activity, the liver should be on the differential.
2. Unexplained weight loss or loss of appetite
Loss of appetite, early satiety, and gradual weight loss without diet change are common in chronic liver disease. In advanced cases muscle wasting (sarcopenia) can be pronounced.
3. Yellowing of the skin or eyes (jaundice)
Jaundice signals significant liver dysfunction or bile duct obstruction. Any patient presenting with yellowing sclera needs urgent liver function testing.
4. Dark urine and pale stools
These changes reflect problems with bilirubin processing. When bile is not reaching the intestine, stools lose color, and unprocessed bilirubin is excreted through the kidneys.
5. Swelling in the legs or abdomen
Fluid retention in the ankles (edema) or abdomen (ascites) is a sign the liver is not producing enough albumin or that portal pressure is elevated.
6-12. Additional warning signs
- Easy bruising or bleeding
- Confusion or difficulty concentrating (early hepatic encephalopathy)
- Itchy skin without a rash
- Spider angiomas or palmar erythema
- Right upper quadrant discomfort or fullness
- Persistent nausea, especially after fatty meals
- Loss of libido or menstrual irregularities
When to test
Any patient with two or more of these signs — particularly with risk factors like viral hepatitis exposure, chronic alcohol use, obesity, or diabetes — should have baseline liver function tests (ALT, AST, ALP, GGT, bilirubin, albumin, INR) and abdominal ultrasound. Early detection is the difference between reversible fatty liver and irreversible cirrhosis.