Liver markers
Use ALT, AST, ALP, GGT, and bilirubin together to understand how doctors review liver-related patterns.
5 marker pages currently mapped into this theme.
This website provides general health information for educational purposes only.
It is not intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for professional medical care.
Nothing here is personalized to you, and using this site does not create a doctor–patient relationship.
Reference ranges differ between laboratories and by age, sex, and method — always use the range printed on your own lab report.
If you have symptoms or concerns, consult a qualified healthcare professional. If you think you may have a medical emergency, contact your doctor or local emergency services immediately.
CRP is a general inflammation marker. A higher result may be associated with infection, inflammation, tissue injury, or other conditions, but it does not point to a single cause on its own.
Educational information only. Not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Related reading: High neutrophils with normal WBC · White blood cell count explained · How to read blood test results
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Theme hubs help you move from one marker page into the wider group that doctors often review alongside it.
Use ALT, AST, ALP, GGT, and bilirubin together to understand how doctors review liver-related patterns.
5 marker pages currently mapped into this theme.
Start with CBC-style markers such as hemoglobin, WBC, hematocrit, MCV, and RDW when the question is about blood cell patterns.
4 marker pages currently mapped into this theme.
Compare ferritin, serum iron, transferrin saturation, TIBC, B12, and folate when low iron stores or anemia questions come up.
6 marker pages currently mapped into this theme.
Browse LDL, HDL, triglycerides, and total cholesterol pages together instead of reading one cholesterol number in isolation.
4 marker pages currently mapped into this theme.
No. CRP is a general marker, so it may show that inflammation is present without identifying the exact cause.
Yes. CRP can change over a short period, which is why timing and repeat testing may matter.
Because many different conditions may be associated with higher CRP, clinicians use it as part of a broader evaluation.
Track your CRP over time
Want to see how your CRP changes across tests and keep a clear history for your next appointment? Get notified when result tracking arrives.
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Compare the marker with related tests, then use the guide if you want a calmer explanation of how blood test pages fit together.