High transaminases do not normally cause yellowing of the eyes. Generally staying up late, drinking heavily, taking medications for liver damage, and viral infections can cause elevated aminotransferases. Yellowing of the eyes is more common in people who stay up too late, consume too much carotene-containing food, and in patients with jaundice. Therefore, people who often stay up late at night, as well as people with hepatitis B and cirrhosis complicated by jaundice, often have elevated aminotransferases and yellowing of the eyes at the same time. If you are not sure what causes the elevation of aminotransferases and yellowing of the eyes, it is recommended that you go to the hepatology department of the hospital to undergo the hepatitis B 5, liver function, and imaging tests to confirm your condition, and then under the guidance of a professional doctor, you should undergo targeted treatment. In daily life, we should pay attention to abstaining from alcohol, which may aggravate liver damage and is not conducive to the recovery of the disease.