How to Read LFT (Liver Function Test) Test

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πŸ”¬ How to Read Liver Function Tests (LFTs) at a Clinical Level – Advanced Interpretation

Liver Function Tests (LFTs) help in diagnosing hepatocellular, cholestatic, or synthetic dysfunction. A systematic interpretation based on patterns rather than isolated values is key for clinical accuracy.


πŸ”Ή 1. Approach to Interpreting LFTs

βœ… Step 1: Check the Pattern of Abnormality

  • Hepatocellular β†’ High ALT/AST (>5x normal)
  • Cholestatic β†’ High ALP & GGT (>3x normal)
  • Synthetic Dysfunction β†’ Low Albumin, High PT/INR

βœ… Step 2: Evaluate Disease Severity

  • Mild (1-2x ULN) β†’ Non-specific / early disease
  • Moderate (2-5x ULN) β†’ Moderate damage
  • Severe (>10-20x ULN) β†’ Acute or fulminant injury

βœ… Step 3: Determine the Etiology

  • Acute vs. Chronic: If albumin is low, suggests chronic disease
  • AST/ALT Ratio: Helps differentiate alcoholic vs. viral vs. ischemic hepatitis
  • Bilirubin Type (Direct vs. Indirect): Helps detect hepatocellular vs. cholestatic causes

βœ… Step 4: Look at Additional Tests

  • Autoimmune Markers β†’ Autoimmune Hepatitis
  • Viral Markers β†’ Hepatitis B & C
  • Metabolic Tests β†’ Wilson’s, Hemochromatosis

πŸ”Ή 2. LFT Interpretation Based on Patterns

A. Hepatocellular Pattern (Liver Cell Injury)

  • ALT & AST elevated (>5x normal)
  • Bilirubin may be high (if severe)
  • ALP & GGT normal/mildly elevated
  • Albumin & PT/INR normal (unless severe)
Possible CausesKey Findings
Viral Hepatitis (A, B, C, E, D)ALT > AST (↑↑ 500-1000+), Bilirubin ↑
Autoimmune HepatitisVery high ALT, Positive ANA, SMA
Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI)ALT/AST >1000 if severe
Ischemic Liver Injury (Shock Liver)ALT/AST ↑↑ (>5000 U/L), Low BP history
Wilson’s DiseaseALT/AST ↑, Low ALP, High Bilirubin, Neurologic symptoms

πŸ“Œ Key Interpretation:

  • ALT > AST β†’ Viral, Autoimmune, NAFLD
  • AST > ALT (2:1) β†’ Alcoholic Liver Disease

B. Cholestatic Pattern (Biliary Obstruction)

  • ALP & GGT elevated (>3x normal)
  • Bilirubin high (Direct > Indirect)
  • ALT/AST may be normal or mildly high
Possible CausesKey Findings
Gallstones (Cholelithiasis, Choledocholithiasis)Sudden ↑ ALP, GGT, Bilirubin
Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC)ALP ↑↑, Anti-Mitochondrial Antibody (AMA)
Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (PSC)ALP ↑↑, Bilirubin ↑, IBD history
Pancreatic/Biliary CancerGradual ↑ ALP, GGT, Bilirubin, weight loss

πŸ“Œ Key Interpretation:

  • If ALP is high & GGT is normal β†’ Bone disease
  • If ALP & GGT are both high β†’ Biliary disease

C. Synthetic Dysfunction (Liver Failure)

  • Albumin low
  • PT/INR prolonged
  • Bilirubin high
  • AST/ALT may be normal or elevated
Possible CausesKey Findings
Cirrhosis (Alcoholic, Viral, NAFLD, Autoimmune)Low albumin, High INR, AST:ALT > 2:1
Acute Liver Failure (Drug-induced, Hepatitis, Wilson’s Disease)High INR, Bilirubin, Encephalopathy

πŸ“Œ Key Interpretation:

  • Low Albumin + High INR + High Bilirubin = Advanced Liver Failure

πŸ”Ή 3. AST/ALT Ratio Interpretation

RatioCondition
AST:ALT > 2:1Alcoholic Liver Disease
AST:ALT > 3:1Severe Alcoholic Hepatitis
AST:ALT < 1Viral Hepatitis, NAFLD
AST:ALT > 5:1Wilson’s Disease, Muscle Injury

πŸ“Œ Example: If AST = 120 and ALT = 40, AST/ALT = 3 β†’ Likely Alcoholic Liver Disease.


πŸ”Ή 4. Bilirubin Interpretation

TypeCauses
Unconjugated (Indirect) Bilirubin ↑Hemolysis, Gilbert’s Syndrome
Conjugated (Direct) Bilirubin ↑Liver disease, Biliary obstruction

πŸ“Œ If direct bilirubin is >50% of total bilirubin, it suggests liver or biliary disease.


πŸ”Ή 5. Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) & GGT

TestKey Interpretation
ALP ↑ + GGT ↑Liver/Cholestasis
ALP ↑ + GGT NormalBone disease
ALP Normal + GGT ↑Alcoholic liver disease

πŸ“Œ Example:

  • ALP 350, GGT 400, Bilirubin 3.0 β†’ Cholestasis (Obstruction or PBC)

πŸ”Ή 6. Interpretation Summary

LFT PatternLikely Causes
ALT/AST ↑↑ (ALT > AST)Hepatitis (Viral, Autoimmune, NAFLD)
AST > ALT (2:1 or 3:1 ratio)Alcoholic Liver Disease
ALT/AST > 1000Acute Hepatitis, Ischemic Injury, DILI
ALP & GGT ↑↑Cholestasis, Biliary Disease
Bilirubin ↑ with Normal ALPHemolysis, Gilbert’s
Albumin ↓ + PT/INR ↑Cirrhosis, Liver Failure

πŸ”Ή 7. Clinical Decision-Making with LFTs

πŸ”Ή If ALT > 10x normal?
β†’ Acute Hepatitis (Viral, Drugs, Ischemia)

πŸ”Ή If AST > ALT with High GGT?
β†’ Alcoholic Liver Disease

πŸ”Ή If ALP ↑↑ with Direct Bilirubin?
β†’ Biliary Obstruction (Gallstones, Cancer)

πŸ”Ή If Albumin ↓ & PT/INR ↑?
β†’ Chronic Liver Disease / Cirrhosis


πŸ”Ή 8. Case-Based Examples

πŸ”΅ Case 1: Viral Hepatitis

  • ALT: 1200 U/L
  • AST: 850 U/L
  • Bilirubin: 2.5 mg/dL
    πŸ“Œ Diagnosis: Acute Hepatitis

πŸ”΄ Case 2: Alcoholic Liver Disease

  • ALT: 50 U/L
  • AST: 130 U/L
  • GGT: 220 U/L
    πŸ“Œ Diagnosis: Alcoholic Hepatitis

🟒 Case 3: Biliary Obstruction

  • ALP: 450 U/L
  • GGT: 500 U/L
  • Direct Bilirubin: 4.5 mg/dL
    πŸ“Œ Diagnosis: Choledocholithiasis (Gallstone in Common Bile Duct)

Total Number of Words: 612

Total Reading Time: 3 minutes 4 seconds