As I said before, you are chronic Hepatitis B in the immune clearance phase. You should measure your viral load. You may or may not seroconvert to HbeAg negative this time. Test again in a few months time, your hbvdna, HbeAg staus and ALT to see and decide whether you should go on treatment or not. Also consult your doctor..
Hello can u help me to understand my result
Result 2012
HbsAg 2055.00 1.0 COI reactive
Anti hbs <2.00 10.0 iu/L non reactive
Anti hbc(m) 0.08 1.0 COI non reactive
HbeAg 948.60 1.0 COI reactive
Anti hbe 5.91 1.0 COI non reactive
Anti hav(m) 0.32 1.0COI non reactive
Result 2013
HbsAg 8316.00 COI <1.00 reactive
HbeAg 34.48 1.0 COI reactive
SGPT(alt) 132.83 u/l
Hello can u help me to understand my result
Result 2012
HbsAg 2055.00 1.0 COI reactive
Anti hbs <2.00 10.0 iu/L non reactive
Anti hbc(m) 0.08 1.0 COI non reactive
HbeAg 948.60 1.0 COI reactive
Anti hbe 5.91 1.0 COI non reactive
Anti hav(m) 0.32 1.0COI non reactive
Result 2013
HbsAg 8316.00 COI <1.00 reactive
HbeAg 34.48 1.0 COI reactive
SGPT(alt) 132.83 u/l
What do u mean immune clearance phase? Thank you for your response :)
First of all, it is important that the numbers given in your results are meaningless if without units or without the reference ranges. The important results are the interpretation given by the lab: negative/reactive, positive/reactive. Only in the specific assays for quantitative HBSAg and hbvdna are the results in number and the unit should be iu/ml. ALT is also in number.
So guessing, you are HBeAg positive and in the immune clearance phase. You should also measure your hbvdna in order to get a complete picture. A history of how long you have been infected is also important.