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I have been drinking alot but have not drank for the last five days with they come back to normal is something serious wrong with me im worried please give me some insite no stupid answers this is real for me

2007-03-23 02:08:32 · 3 answers · asked by monkeypower777 2 in Health Diseases & Conditions Infectious Diseases

3 answers

AST and ALT are enzymes that are produced in the liver and leak into the general circulation when liver cells are injured. Hence, serum AST levels are elevated in liver damage, but also may be increased with heart, kidney, or pancreatic disease. The ALT is far more specific to the liver than to other organs, and elevated ALT levels are very indicative of hepatic inflammation. The AST and ALT are also used to monitor the course of chronic liver disease (e.g., hepatitis) and the response to treatment

Normal Results for Liver Function Tests
AST (SGOT) 0 to 40 IU/L
ALT (SGPT) 0 to 40 IU/L
Alkaline Phosphatase 25 to 150 IU/L
Total Bilirubin 0.1 to 1.2 mg/dL
Serum Albumin 3.5 to 5.5 g/dL
Aminotransferases (ALT and AST)

Aminotransferases are enzymes that facilitate certain chemical reactions within cells. Normally, a small amount of ALT and AST are present in the blood. However, ALT and AST leak out from dead or damaged cells at a high rate and as a result, their activities (a unit of measurement that roughly corresponds to amount) in the blood can be elevated. ALT is present almost exclusively in hepatocytes, the major cell of the liver.

AST is present in hepatocytes and also heart and skeletal muscle. When liver hepatocytes are being damaged or dying, ALT and AST leak out of dying cells and their activities are increased in the blood. The ALT and AST can be elevated in many different liver conditions, most commonly alcoholic liver disease, viral hepatitis, drugs, and fatty liver. In alcoholic liver disease, the AST is often more elevated than the ALT. The AST alone may be elevated in muscle or heart disease in the absence of liver disease.
Slight AST or ALT elevations (within 1.5 times the upper limits of normal) do not necessarily indicate liver disease

ALT 152 (normal 5-45), AST 95 (normal 10-35)

You must not drink at all!, you will get better, your liver can heal itself, drink plenty of water, eat vegetables, light easy to digest salads, stay off the booze please. ive seen heavy drinkers on death row and they just stopped drinking in time, and are now o.k., I assume you go back to docs soon, think possitive. All the best

2007-03-23 02:43:49 · answer #1 · answered by nightdreamer 3 · 0 0

Those are liver enzymes that tell you that you have damage to your liver. Drinking a lot damages your liver. Not drinking for 5 days doesn't repair the damage. I would suggest quit drinking for good.

2007-03-23 02:13:53 · answer #2 · answered by Laura B 2 · 0 1

Lock & Bolt your self in your BEDROOM looks like .NOSFERATUS about your Premises`hope it dont go any lower`ps-TETLEY BITTER will fill you up again`

2007-03-23 02:20:57 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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