Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT)

ALT is a liver enzyme that helps check how healthy your liver cells are.

Last reviewedJune 16, 2026
Serum
sample type
~5 mL
blood needed
~7 days
results in app
Any time of day
best timing
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In short

Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) is an enzyme found mostly inside liver cells. It helps the liver turn protein into energy.

When liver cells are damaged or inflamed, they leak ALT into the blood, so the level in your blood is a sensitive sign of liver health.

Liver Function
Reviewed against DGKL reference practice.
Why it matters

Why test this?

A raised ALT usually points to the liver. Common causes are fatty liver, alcohol, viral hepatitis, and some medicines. Because ALT sits mainly in the liver, it is one of the most specific blood markers of liver cell damage.

A low ALT is not a concern. The value is most useful read together with AST and GGT to build a picture of what is happening in the liver.

Reference ranges

What is a normal result?

Aniva reads your result against research-backed ranges, not just the lab's wide normal. The reference shown below is specific to this biomarker.

GroupSerum ALT (SI)
Menup to ~50 U/L
Womenup to ~35 U/L

Ranges are guidance only and vary by lab, assay, and sex. Many German labs follow IFCC standardised limits. Read your result against your own lab's reference interval, in line with DGKL practice.

Ranges are guidance and vary by lab and assay, aligned with DGKL practice. Always read your result against your own lab's reference interval.
What you'll learn

What insights will this test give you?

  • Whether your liver cells show signs of stress or damage
  • An early signal of fatty liver before symptoms appear
  • Context for alcohol intake, weight, or medication effects
  • A baseline to track if you are making lifestyle changes
What affects your level

What can affect this result?

What can skew the result

Strenuous exercise and muscle injury can raise ALT a little, since some is found outside the liver. Many medicines and supplements affect it. Haemolysis of the sample can alter the reading. Fasting is not required.

Best interpreted with

Best read with AST, GGT, and alkaline phosphatase, and the AST to ALT ratio helps separate alcohol related from other liver injury.

How testing works

How is this tested?

Sample
Serum
Blood needed
~5 mL
Method
Photometry
Best timing
Any time of day
FAQ

Common questions

What does a high ALT mean? It suggests your liver cells are irritated or stressed. Causes include medicines, alcohol, infections, or fatty liver.

Do I need to fast for an ALT test? No. Fasting is not required for ALT.

What can affect my ALT result? Recent alcohol, hard workouts, muscle injury, illness, or certain medicines and herbal supplements can change values.

How often should I check ALT? It depends on your situation. Many people recheck within weeks to months after changes or if elevated.

How long do results take? Results are usually ready in about 7 days.

What should I discuss with my clinician? Share all medicines and supplements, alcohol use, and recent exercise or illness to guide next steps.

On this page
Why testReference rangesWhat you'll learnWhat affects itHow testing worksSourcesFAQ
✦ Privately insured? German PKV usually reimburses.

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