Page 1 of 1

reading lab reports

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 2:02 pm
by jerrygallow
My labs are mostly all within range, but a couple things stick out.

AST is 32 with a range of 8-30
basopil 1.4 range 0-1
alkaline phosphatase is 134 range is 30-130

I got these after my doctors visit, whom I see maybe once every year. It looks like these point to poor liver function. Anybody know what causes this and if it is cause for concern? Thanks

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 2:40 pm
by jimmylegs
hey there. two of those are liver enzymes afaik.. indicates leakage of stuff that's supposed to be in the liver, out into the general bloodstream. so a tinge of a leak.
remind me if you have a recent serum zinc result?

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 2:47 pm
by jerrygallow
no, I've never had zinc tested. I'm going to ask

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 3:38 pm
by jimmylegs
ok sounds good. zinc is good for liver repair.

rat study: "Interestingly, supplementation of Zn to protein deficient rats helped in regulating the altered activities of ALP, AST and ALT both in serum and liver."

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 8:35 pm
by want2bike
here is an article explaining the problems with poor liver function. If you are taking drugs that can be a problem. It also suggest what you can do to repair your liver. Cayenne and vegetable juicing is a good way to repair you liver. I take milk thistle to protect my liver.

http://www.naturalnews.com/035305_weigh ... esity.html

http://umm.edu/health/medical/altmed/herb/milk-thistle

http://www.puristat.com/liver-cleansing ... istle.aspx

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:57 pm
by centenarian100
jerrygallow wrote:My labs are mostly all within range, but a couple things stick out.

AST is 32 with a range of 8-30
basopil 1.4 range 0-1
alkaline phosphatase is 134 range is 30-130

I got these after my doctors visit, whom I see maybe once every year. It looks like these point to poor liver function. Anybody know what causes this and if it is cause for concern? Thanks
With regards to the AST, do you drink alcohol. Sometimes an elevated AST:ALT ratio can be related to alcohol intake. Was your ALT normal? Do you take any meds that affect the liver?

I doubt the increased basophil percentage is significant, particularly if your overall white blood cell count is somewhat low.

Alk phos can be related to cholestasis (poor bile flow) or increased turnover in the bones. there are actually separate bone and lever isoenzymes which can be tested if necessary. GGT should be elevated if cholestasis is present but will not be elevated in the case of increased bone turnover.

If the rest of your liver enzymes are normal, I doubt it is of much concern.

In general, I doubt any of that is much cause for alarm

Please let us know any updates

-C

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2014 12:45 pm
by jerrygallow
thanks for the reply. I don't drink. I was on Tysabri for five years, which can stress the liver. I also take a variety of supplements.

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2014 10:17 pm
by silverwings87
do you or have you taken prednisone recently? if you're concerned about the values, you can talk to your doctor and see if you could possibly start taking sam-e, it's a supplement that's really good for the liver

Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Fri Feb 28, 2014 9:22 am
by want2bike
Dr. Stephen Stokes seems to think trimethylglycine can regenerate the liver. Never used it myself but might be something to investigate if you think you have a problem with your liver.


Re: reading lab reports

Posted: Sat Nov 11, 2017 10:47 pm
by THX1138
Lab Unit Conversion Tool

The resource for conversion SI units to conventional or traditional units
used in laboratory and medical practice


http://unitslab.com/