What’s wrong with high C-glutamyl and glutamic oxalacetic transaminases?

High glutamate and glutamic acid aminotransferases can have many causes, the most common in life being fatty liver and alcoholic liver. It can also be caused by prolonged fatigue and excessive late nights. In our country, it is mostly due to hepatitis B. The cause needs to be clearly identified in the clinical diagnosis before management.

Glutathione and glutathione, an indicator of liver function.

Both indicators are elevated due to some degree of hepatocellular damage, but not necessarily a disease state, and are likely related to lifestyle and dietary habits. For example, they are caused by chronic high alcohol consumption or eating high-fat, high-fat foods, or by long-term use of certain drugs that damage the liver.

Elevated glutathione and glutamic oxalacetic transaminases are most commonly seen in clinical settings in diseases of the hepatobiliary system, such as acute cholecystitis, acute cholangitis, bile duct tumors, liver cancer, pancreatic head cancer, and acute and chronic hepatitis, mainly caused by viral hepatitis B in China. Therefore, effective treatment must be selected after the cause of the disease is clarified.

Commonly used hepatoprotective drugs include reduced glutathione and compound glycopyrrolate. It is beneficial for liver function recovery.

If a person has been healthy in the past and has recently developed mild elevations in glutathione and glutamic acid aminotransferase, it is most likely that recent alcohol consumption, or continuous late nights, excessive fatigue, and long-term medications have caused liver function impairment and liver cell damage. If this is the cause, patients need to take more rest, avoid drinking alcohol or stop drinking alcohol, and arrange work and rest reasonably. You can also take medication to lower transaminases as prescribed by your doctor, and liver function will mostly slowly drop to normal.