High transaminases and blood sugar should be clearly diagnosed, and liver-protecting treatment and blood sugar-lowering treatment should be given if necessary, while finding the causes of elevated transaminases and treating the primary diseases.
High transaminases should pay attention to understand the specific severity of the disease, pay attention to find the cause, test the hepatitis series, check the abdominal ultrasound or CT, to understand the cause of the patient’s transaminase elevation, some patients may have a fatty liver, hepatitis, etc., and should be actively given symptomatic treatment. If necessary, give liver-protecting drugs, such as dicyclomine.
Patients with high blood glucose, depending on how high the blood glucose, if necessary, need to go to the hospital to improve the glucose tolerance test. If you have the typical “three more and one less” symptoms of diabetes, you can be diagnosed with diabetes if you have a fasting blood glucose of 7 ≥ mmol/l, or a 2-hour postprandial blood glucose of ≥ 11.1 mmol/l, or a random blood glucose of ≥ 11.1 mmol/l, or a glycosylated hemoglobin of ≥ 6.5 percent.
If there are no symptoms of diabetes, two plasma glucose events meeting these criteria are required to confirm the diagnosis. Patients with a clear diagnosis of diabetes mellitus can be treated with diet and medication under the guidance of a doctor, commonly used drugs such as dagliflozin and metformin.
Patients with high aminotransferases and high blood glucose should be evaluated under the guidance of a physician and given treatment as prescribed.