Liver Disease Symptoms Quiz
This quiz helps you organize liver disease symptoms and risk factors, including early signs of liver problems such as fatigue, nausea, and yellowing skin, that may point to liver irritation or reduced function. It is designed for education and planning, not diagnosis.
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Your results organize the symptoms and risk factors you reported into a practical follow-up plan.
- See whether your answers show lower, moderate, or higher concern
- Get patterns to watch based on liver-related warning signs
- Review blood tests and biomarkers that may help guide a clinician conversation
- Find Rite Aid links for liver health, biomarkers, and pharmacy support
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Why you got this result
| Score | Answer | Note |
|---|---|---|
No higher-scoring answers stood out — your responses pointed toward lower concern.
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Patterns to watch
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about this quiz, what it covers, and what your results mean.
This quiz does not diagnose liver disease or replace medical care. If you have severe abdominal pain, confusion, vomiting blood, black stools, fainting, or yellowing of the skin or eyes with worsening symptoms, seek urgent medical attention.
Liver disease is a broad term for conditions that affect how the liver works. The liver helps process nutrients, filter toxins, make bile, and support blood clotting, so many different problems can affect it.
Your liver supports digestion, metabolism, immune function, and removal of waste products from the blood. When liver function is reduced, symptoms may affect energy, digestion, skin color, swelling, and bleeding or bruising.
Possible causes include viral hepatitis, heavy alcohol use, fatty liver disease linked to metabolic risk, certain medications or supplements, autoimmune conditions, bile duct problems, and inherited conditions.
Yes. Some liver conditions have few or no symptoms early on. That is why risk factors, routine checkups, and blood tests can be important for people with higher risk.
Fatty liver disease means extra fat has built up in the liver. It can be linked to obesity, insulin resistance, diabetes, high triglycerides, alcohol use, or other factors.
Symptoms may include fatigue, nausea, poor appetite, upper-right abdominal discomfort, dark urine, pale stools, itching, swelling, easy bruising, and yellowing of the skin or eyes. These symptoms can also have other causes.
Early signs can be vague, such as tiredness, nausea, reduced appetite, or mild abdominal discomfort. More specific signs, such as jaundice, dark urine, pale stools, or unexplained itching, should be discussed with a healthcare professional.
A healthcare professional may use your symptoms, medical history, physical exam, blood tests, imaging, hepatitis tests, and sometimes specialist evaluation. No single quiz can diagnose liver disease.
Common liver-related blood tests include ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase, GGT, bilirubin, albumin, and prothrombin time or INR. Your clinician may recommend additional tests depending on your symptoms and history.
Liver enzyme tests can show signs of liver irritation or injury, but they do not always identify the exact cause. Abnormal results should be interpreted with your symptoms, medications, alcohol use, risk factors, and other tests.
Yes, liver or bile-flow problems can sometimes cause itching, especially when bile-related substances build up. Itching can also come from skin, allergy, kidney, thyroid, or medication-related causes.
Some liver conditions can be linked to poor appetite, nausea, or unintended weight loss. Because weight loss has many possible causes, it is worth discussing if it is unexplained or ongoing.
Some liver conditions can worsen over time and may lead to scarring, reduced liver function, fluid buildup, bleeding problems, or other complications. Early evaluation can help identify the cause and next steps.
The timing depends on the cause, overall health, and treatment plan. Some liver enzyme changes improve within weeks after a trigger is addressed, while others need longer monitoring and medical care.
Seek urgent care for confusion, fainting, severe abdominal pain, vomiting blood, black stools, trouble breathing, rapid belly swelling, or sudden or worsening yellowing of the skin or eyes.
Early liver disease often has no symptoms. Liver enzyme blood tests (such as ALT and AST) are the common way to check liver health before symptoms appear.
Early signs can include fatigue, nausea, upper-right belly discomfort, and later yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, or itching.