
Liver Health & Function Assessment
Audit your core metabolic filter. Track vital liver enzymes, proteins, and clearance metrics to optimise internal recovery and processing. Rapid digital reporting with straightforward, plain-English AI summaries.
8 biomarkers across 1 health systems
Tap any group to see exactly what we measure and why it matters.
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ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase)
A liver enzyme that leaks into the blood when liver cells are stressed. Mildly raised ALT is common after heavy training, recent alcohol, certain medications, or fatty changes in the liver. Persistently high ALT is worth discussing with a GP.
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Total Bilirubin
A yellow pigment made when old red blood cells are broken down. Slightly raised bilirubin is often a harmless inherited pattern (Gilbert's syndrome); larger elevations can reflect liver or red blood cell processes.
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ALP (Alkaline Phosphatase)
An enzyme involved in both liver and bone activity. Levels naturally vary with age (higher in growing teens, post-fracture healing) and during pregnancy, as well as with liver function.
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Albumin
The most abundant protein made by your liver. It transports hormones and nutrients around the body and helps regulate fluid balance. Low albumin can reflect liver, kidney, gut or nutritional factors.
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Total Protein
The combined amount of albumin and globulin in your blood. It's a broad picture of protein status, used together with albumin and globulin to spot imbalances.
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GGT (Gamma-Glutamyl Transferase)
A liver enzyme particularly sensitive to alcohol intake and certain medications. Useful for understanding the source when other liver markers are raised.
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Globulin (calculated)
Proteins that play a major role in immunity, clotting and transport. Calculated by subtracting albumin from total protein. Patterns here can signal immune or inflammatory activity.
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Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST)
An enzyme that leaks into your blood when liver cells are stressed or damaged. Often looked at alongside ALT to give a clearer picture of liver health. Heavy exercise can also raise it temporarily.
From order to answers in four steps
Order online
Choose at-home or clinic. Free tracked delivery either way.
Collect your sample
Simple finger-prick or a quick visit to one of our UK partner clinics.
Lab analyses it
Posted back free to our UKAS-accredited partner laboratories.
Plain-English results
Within 48 hours in your secure portal, with your lifestyle action plan.
Includes AI summary & action planQuick prep for an accurate result
Numbers on the left. Answers on the right.
Every marker shows its result and reference range, colour-coded by status. Each group gets a plain-English explanation and lifestyle context.
in Customizer
What people say
Frequently asked
Capillary (finger-prick) samples are highly reliable when collected correctly. Our partner laboratories are UKAS-accredited and process samples to the same clinical standards used by the NHS and private clinics. For panels needing a larger sample, a clinic draw is recommended at the cart stage.
Morning, before 10am, after an 8-hour fast (water is fine). Avoid heavy exercise for 24 hours and pause biotin supplements for 2 days. Post the sample back the same day, Monday to Thursday.
Vitall Check provides AI-powered plain-English summaries and a personalised lifestyle action plan, not clinical diagnoses. If results sit outside the reference range, we provide a ready-to-use guide for your next GP appointment.
Many medications and conditions can influence biomarker results. We recommend discussing your medical history with your GP, who will interpret your results in the full clinical context.
When your kit arrives, visit vitallcheck.co.uk/activate and enter your order number.
Delivery: Free tracked delivery on every kit, both ways. Order before 1pm Monday to Friday for next-day delivery.
Posting your sample: Post Monday to Thursday so your sample reaches the lab before the weekend.
Sample failures: If the lab can't process your sample, your replacement kit is free. Additional replacements are charged at £40.
