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Aspartate Transaminase

Aspartate Transaminase
Method: IFCC Kinetic UV
(AST)
Liquid reagent: R1: R2=3:1
(AST)

Clinical Significance of Aspartate Transaminase

Aspartate Transaminase (AST), formerly called Serum Glutamate Oxaloacetate Transaminase (SGOT), is an intracellular enzyme present in:

  • Liver
  • Heart (cardiac muscle)
  • Skeletal muscle
  • Kidney
  • Brain
  • RBCs

It catalyzes:
Aspartate + α-ketoglutarate → Oxaloacetate + Glutamate

1️⃣ Hepatocellular Injury

AST is released into blood when liver cells are damaged.

Elevated in:

  • Acute viral hepatitis
  • Toxic hepatitis
  • Drug-induced liver injury
  • Cirrhosis

🔎 In liver disease:

  • Both AST and ALT rise
  • ALT is more liver-specific
  • AST levels are usually lower than ALT in acute hepatitis

2️⃣ Alcoholic Liver Disease

📌 Important clinical point:

  • AST:ALT ratio > 2:1 suggests alcoholic liver disease
  • Due to mitochondrial damage and pyridoxal phosphate deficiency

3️⃣ Myocardial Infarction (Historical Use)

AST was previously used as a marker for:

Acute myocardial infarction (MI)

Pattern:

  • Rises within 6–12 hours
  • Peaks at 24–36 hours
  • Returns to normal in 3–5 days

⚠ Now replaced by:

  • Troponin
  • CK-MB

4️⃣ Muscle Disorders

Elevated in:

  • Muscular dystrophy
  • Severe muscle injury
  • Rhabdomyolysis
  • Trauma

Since AST is present in muscle, levels increase with muscle damage.

5️⃣ Hemolysis

Mild increase may occur due to:

  • Hemolytic anemia
  • Hemolyzed blood samples

Normal Reference Range

AST: ~8–40 IU/L (varies by laboratory)

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