Authors: Mary A. Williamson Mt(ascp) Phd,L. Michael Snyder Md
Use
Most sensitive tests for acute hepatocellular injury (e.g., viral, drug); precedes increase in serum bilirubin by approximately 1 week
Interpretation
Increased In
Hepatocellular damage, liver cell necrosis, or injury of any cause.
Alcoholic hepatitis (AST > ALT).
Viral and chronic hepatitis (ALT > AST).
Early acute hepatitis: AST is usually higher initially, but by 48 hours, ALT is usually higher.
AST levels of 500 U/L suggest acute hepatocellular injury; seldom >500 U/L in obstructive jaundice, cirrhosis, viral hepatitis, AIDS, alcoholic liver disease.
Acute fulminant viral hepatitis: Abrupt AST rise may be seen (rarely >4,000 IU/L) and declines more slowly; positive serologic tests and acute chemical injury.
Congestive heart failure, arrhythmia, sepsis, and GI hemorrhage AST levels reach to a peak of 1,000–9,000 U/L, declining by 50% within 3 days and to <100 U/L within a week, suggesting shock liver with centrolobular necrosis. Serum bilirubin and ALP reflect underlying disease.
Trauma to skeletal or heart muscle.
Acute heart failure (AST > ALT).
Severe exercise, burns, heat stroke.