Podcast Transcript below:
Over the years, we have all become programmed to know certain numbers related to your health, including you cholesterol levels, including the good and bad cholesterol numbers, your blood pressure, values of your body mass index, and for men, their PSA values. Now I have one more you need to know: your ALT or amino alanine transaminase.
Any elevated level of ALT often suggest the existence of other medical problems such as alcoholic or viral hepatitis, fatty liver disease , autoimmune problems involving the liver, reactions to medications you are taking, as well as a host of other problems, as well as non-liver issues including congestive heart failure, and infectious. For this reason, ALT is commonly used as a way of screening for liver problems.
All too often, individuals have no idea what their ALT is, yet problems with their liver may be brewing silently, usually without any reportable symptoms. Additionally, minor elevations of the ALT are commonly ignored by physicians.
This is your chance to take charge!
Look over your medical records and see what your ALT is. If it is elevated, contact your physician and ask for further testing and evaluation. If you don’t have any records at home, ask your physician when your ALT was last tested and find out if it has been elevated in the past. NO ALT elevation should be ignored and requires a through evaluation.
Knowing your ALT is a powerful tool in preventing serious problems in the years to come.
The liver is the largest organ in the body and is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen, immediately under the diaphragm and weighs approximately three pounds. The size of the liver is proportional to the size of the person. No two livers are the same size.
The liver is a complex chemical “factory” that works 24 hours a day. Virtually all the blood returning from the intestinal tract to the heart passes through the liver via the portal vein. Anything a person consumes is absorbed into the bloodstream and passes through the liver. The liver is a complex organ that is essential to life. It is impossible to live without it. Specifically, the liver helps by:
There are over 100 known liver diseases. The most common ones are:
Liver Disease is a serious national problem. Ten percent of all Americans - over 25 million people - suffer liver disease or a related illness. Liver disease kills more than 26,000 Americans a year, ranking eighth in
disease-related deaths. Untreated, liver disease degrades liver function and may lead to cirrhosis, cancer or liver failure. Transplantation is the only remedy for liver failure, which is otherwise fatal.
Every year, nearly 400,000 Americans contract viral hepatitis: 125,000-150,000 new cases of Hepatitis A, nearly 150,000 new cases of Hepatitis B, and 30,000-50,000 new Hepatitis C infections, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An estimated 4 million Americans, or 1 in 50, are chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV).
Consult your physician if you observe any of these signs or symptoms of liver disease:
Remember that many forms of liver disease can have no symptoms at all.
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For additional information on this Podcast article, please contact:
Dr. Joseph Galati Galati
(713) 795-5319
Source: Joseph S. Galati, M.D.
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very interesting congratulations