What are the symptoms of alcoholic liver disease? As we all know, alcoholic liver disease is caused by long-term excessive alcohol abuse that leads to liver cell damage, resulting in elevated transaminases and bilirubin indicators. The liver damage caused by mild alcoholic liver disease is often mild, and once the patient stops drinking alcohol, eats fresh vegetables and fruits, and exercises properly, liver function can slowly return to normal. Patients often do not have any clinical manifestations at this time. Because there is no discomfort, many patients in the early stages of alcoholic liver disease tend to ignore the disease, causing further aggravation, leading to the occurrence of moderate and severe alcoholic liver disease. Progressive aggravation of the disease in patients can lead to clinical manifestations of indigestion such as anorexia, nausea, abdominal distention, belching, etc. In addition, liver cell damage can lead to the proliferation of fibrous tissue, causing the liver to harden in texture and slowly develop into alcoholic cirrhosis. If elevated portal vein pressure occurs, the bleeding spleen may become congested and enlarged, and the rupture of esophagogastric fundic varices induces the occurrence of upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage, or even hypoproteinemia with the appearance of peritoneal effusion. Patients with alcoholic liver disease to this extent often do not easily recover completely in a short period of time, and need long-term standardized liver care treatment, and absolute abstinence from alcohol to reduce further damage to the liver, only then may slowly recover.