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Also reported in: U/L
Your GGT is in the normal range, suggesting your liver is not under significant stress from alcohol, fatty liver disease, bile duct issues, or certain medications.
Very low GGT is very rare and not associated with any well-defined disease in adults. It is almost always a measurement artifact.
No clinical action needed. Confirm with repeat test if needed.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — very low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A low GGT has no known adverse clinical significance. It simply means the enzyme that reflects liver stress and alcohol metabolism is at a very low level — often a sign of excellent liver health.
No action needed. This is a favorable finding.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — below reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A low-normal GGT is generally associated with low alcohol intake and good liver health.
No action needed.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline lowYour GGT is in the normal range, suggesting your liver is not under significant stress from alcohol, fatty liver disease, bile duct issues, or certain medications.
No action needed. Continue healthy lifestyle habits.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — within reference rangeYour GGT sits in the lower end of the healthy range — a good sign of minimal liver stress and likely low alcohol and processed food intake.
Excellent result. Keep up healthy habits.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimalBorderline elevated GGT is a sensitive but non-specific marker. It rises with even modest alcohol intake, fatty liver, certain medications, and some supplements. It is also elevated in metabolic syndrome.
Reduce alcohol intake and review any hepatotoxic medications or supplements. Retest in 4–6 weeks. If fatty liver is suspected, a liver ultrasound may be useful.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline highA noticeably elevated GGT is one of the most sensitive markers for alcohol-related liver damage, fatty liver disease (Fatty liver not from alcohol (NAFLD)/NASH), bile duct disease, or hepatitis. It rises before symptoms and before structural damage is visible.
See your doctor. Reduce or eliminate alcohol, assess diet for fatty liver contributors (sugar, refined carbs), and evaluate bile duct function with ultrasound if warranted.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — above reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})At this level of GGT elevation, significant liver damage, advanced fatty liver disease, noticeable alcohol-related liver disease, or complete bile duct obstruction is likely. This is not a minor liver strain — this indicates serious hepatic injury.
Seek urgent medical care. Comprehensive liver evaluation, imaging, and specialist review are needed promptly.
GGT: {{value}} {{unit}} — very high (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.