http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2291230/
I applied for a job in correction and as part of the employment process you have to take a medical and complete a physical activity test. so of course i started working out to pass the physical activity test. When I took the medical my AST and ALT was high, and cause a red flag for employment. I don't drink, and I'm not on any meds. I'm young and very healthy and can not understand why these would be so high, 128/51. I've read online that exercise could be the cause of this. I go to my regular dr on Monday and I have not been working out for the past 2 weeks so I pray that my levels are back to normal when I'm retested. I will keep y'all posted.
I normally do not write here. But I also went through this this week and thought I should share my exp
3weeks ago I went to my yearly exam and my tests came back with ALT of 80 and AST of 115. The blood was drawn 3 days after I did a session of p90x (exercise routine).
My doctor didn't think exercise could cause that elevation and ordered a repeat test plust a test for hep a b and c, lupus and 20 other diseases
Tests came back all negative and AST and ALT went down to mid 20s
The ONLY think that changed between the two tests (they were taken 10 days apart) is that for the second test I didn't exercise for a week before the test
Not scientific evidence of course but I do believe unless the first test had a lab error that exercise is by far the most likely explanation in my case
thanks...that does help....i thought that could be trouble...my enzymes can get get in the 200s or be almost normal...they were best last winter when i was in florida not working so hard...also my vl went way down when i was down there..i really like to be thin and flexible..that takes exercise at work and after too..i love lots of exercise..this is a drag..another reason to tx and get this virus gone..and a reason to not over do during tx......billy
I've been getting bloodwork done consistently for the past eight years because of volunteer medical studies I do, and I can say for certain that strenuous activity elevates liver enzymes (ALT). I've gotten to the point that I can predict my numbers, though some doctors still argue that this shouldn't be the case. I've been well above 300 before. If I'm sore my ALT will be up, every time. Hope this helps
Your thread was right on time, at least for me. I also recently learned about the possible association of elevated AST/ALT with muscle strain, but my understanding is that it is generally low on the list of differential diagnoses.
From a personal experience standpoint, my son has had elevated AST/ALT/Alk Phos since last month (86/116/124 respectively), and had tons of work-up: all the heps were ruled out, as well as gallbladder concerns. He is not medicating and abstains from alcohol, so it's been quite a puzzle for his doctors -- they have yet to identify the cause, and his elevations have continued all month. Of note, he did have a shoulder/muscle injury almost in the same timeframe as his elevated levels, so it certainly begs the question you are posing, but his doctors have not "attributed" his high liver enzymes to exercise or injury -- they continue to draw blood and monitor his levels in seeking a diagnosis. I don't know whether there will eventually be information to confirm or deny your hypothesis, but I know I'm wondering about it as well and asking similar questions.
~eureka
I had a symptomatic acute stage when I contracted the virus over 30 years ago. Sky high enzymes, wine colored urine, yellow eyes, jaundice, light stools, flu symptons, etc. Later, I became asymptomatic with enzymes in the slightly elevated range, common with chronic HCV.
However, over the next several years I had 2-3 what would be be termed acute relapses where my enzymes (alt and ast) shot skyward (toward 1000 or more) mixed with extreme fatigue and at least once dark urine if I remember correctly, maybe some jaundice. In each of those instances I'm pretty sure the relapses were brought about by vigorous exercise.
Then, about seven years after infection, I stopped having these enzyme spikes in spite of vigorous exercise until about three years prior to treating when my enzymes again started to approach 1000 with extreme fatigue. My heptologist at the time likened it to an acute reaction and in fact we decided to put off treatment until things calmed down. In this instance there were three possible culprits -- vigorous exercise, Hep B vaccination and Chinese Herbs. I'm pretty sure it was either the Hep B vaccination or Chinese Herbs or a combination of the two.
-- Jim
-- Jim
I think you'd have to really be excercising strenuously to raise them enough for it to matter - otherwise doctors wouldn't automatically think to test us for Hep in the first place, the question would be "do you exercise rigorously on a regular basis?" but that's not what they say they say "is there any chance you have been exposed to hep I want to run a test".............."do you have any tattooes or piercings?" right?
But as far as I've heard no doctor ever assumes you were working out.
Not as scientific an answer as yours but...what I've always figured!
I know this is a little off topic but though I would post it anyway. My AST is 97 and ALT 98 which have both doubled during tx. After my second week of tx both numbers dropped in the 20's. After one month of tx numbers started to rise. Nurse said it could be due to OTC I was taking, which would be Tylenol. This is all I was taking.
I am conducting a little experiment, which is not easy with my nightly fevers and no Tylenol for a month now. Oops I did take two, a few weeks ago. I am having blood work done Monday and I am curious to see if those levels dropped.
I know this is a long shot but just thought I would try.
All I know is if you are tested for Hepatitis and other liver problems are negative then the cause of elevated enzymes can be strenuous excercise.