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An FLI in the 30–60 range represents intermediate risk of hepatic steatosis. The component markers (BMI, waist circumference, GGT, triglycerides) are collectively pointing to a growing possibility of liver fat accumulation. This is a common finding in metabolically active middle age and does not is consistent with fatty liver but suggests liver ultrasound would be informative.
The Fatty Liver Index (FLI) is a calculated score using BMI, waist circumference, triglycerides, and GGT to predict the probability of fatty liver (hepatic steatosis). A very low FLI score close to 0 indicates a very low probability that significant fat has accumulated in the liver. Healthy liver fat percentage at this score is typically well within normal limits.
Excellent result. Very low FLI indicates a very low risk of fatty liver disease. Maintain a healthy weight and diet.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — very low (ref: <30 low risk; >60 high risk)A low FLI score below 30 indicates a low probability of hepatic steatosis (fatty liver). The input markers — BMI, waist circumference, GGT, and triglycerides — are collectively in a range that does not suggest significant liver fat accumulation. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (Fatty liver not from alcohol (NAFLD)) is unlikely based on this score.
Low risk result. Continue a balanced diet and regular exercise to maintain this low score.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — low risk of fatty liver (ref: <30 low risk)A borderline low FLI is still in the low-risk category, though approaching the intermediate zone. At this level, fatty liver is unlikely but metabolic risk factors may be starting to accumulate. Monitoring and preventive lifestyle habits are appropriate to keep this score from rising.
Good result. Stay mindful of weight, diet quality, and alcohol intake to prevent FLI from trending upward.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — low-intermediate risk (ref: <30 low risk; 30–60 intermediate)An FLI in the 30–60 range represents intermediate risk of hepatic steatosis. The component markers (BMI, waist circumference, GGT, triglycerides) are collectively pointing to a growing possibility of liver fat accumulation. This is a common finding in metabolically active middle age and does not is consistent with fatty liver but suggests liver ultrasound would be informative.
Discuss with your doctor. Consider liver ultrasound to directly assess liver fat. Weight loss, exercise, reduced fructose and alcohol intake are the primary lifestyle interventions.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — intermediate risk (ref: 30–60)An optimal FLI below 30 reflects consistently favorable metabolic parameters — BMI, waist circumference, triglycerides, and GGT are all in ranges that strongly argue against significant liver fat accumulation. This is associated with the lowest risk of metabolic-associated steatohepatitis and liver fibrosis progression.
Excellent result. Keep metabolic health in check with regular exercise, balanced diet, and healthy body weight.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — optimal low risk (ref: <30)A borderline high FLI approaching 60 puts the liver in the intermediate-to-high risk zone for hepatic steatosis. The combination of metabolic markers is collectively pointing toward likely liver fat accumulation. Fatty liver not from alcohol (NAFLD) at this stage may not cause symptoms but can progress to NASH (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) and fibrosis if metabolic conditions continue unchecked.
Liver ultrasound is recommended to directly assess liver fat. A comprehensive metabolic intervention — weight loss, exercise, dietary changes, reduced alcohol — should be started promptly.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — borderline high risk (ref: <30 low; >60 high; borderline: 50–60)An FLI above 60 indicates high probability of hepatic steatosis. The combined metabolic parameters strongly suggest significant fat has accumulated in the liver cells. Fatty liver disease at this level increases the risk of inflammation (NASH), fibrosis, cirrhosis over time, and is closely tied to insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular disease.
See your doctor. Liver ultrasound is needed to confirm this fatty liver. Comprehensive lifestyle intervention — especially weight loss of 5–10%, regular exercise, and reduced carbohydrate intake — can noticeably reverse fatty liver.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — high risk of fatty liver (ref: <30 low; >60 high)A very high FLI above 90 strongly predicts significant hepatic steatosis, likely accompanied by underlying metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, or metabolic-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). At this score, liver inflammation and early fibrosis may already be developing. This level noticeably elevates long-term risk of liver disease progression and cardiovascular events.
Urgent medical evaluation including liver ultrasound, liver enzymes, and metabolic assessment is needed. Structured weight loss, exercise program, and possibly pharmacological support for metabolic syndrome should be initiated without delay.
Fatty Liver Index: {{value}} — very high fatty liver risk (ref: <30 low; >60 high; very high: >90)Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.