Below is a patient-friendly “what this number means” guide for the most common items reported on a CBC, CMP, TSH/Free T4, and a standard lipid panel. (Exact names and a few extras vary a bit by lab.)
A quick reality check: one abnormal value rarely equals a diagnosis. Labs are clues. Your clinician interprets them with symptoms, meds, recent illness, hydration status, and trends over time.
CBC (Complete Blood Count)
A CBC looks at blood cells: infection-fighting cells, oxygen-carrying cells, and clotting cells.
White blood cells (infection/inflammation cells)
- WBC (White Blood Cell Count)
- What it is: Total number of white blood cells.
- High can mean: Infection, inflammation, stress (including steroids), smoking, sometimes bone marrow conditions.
- Low can mean: Certain viral infections, immune suppression, medication effects, bone marrow problems.
- Differential (types of white blood cells)
Often reported as % and absolute count (absolute is usually more useful).- Neutrophils (Neutrophils, ANC = Absolute Neutrophil Count)
- High: Often bacterial infection, inflammation, steroids, physical stress.
- Low: Some viral infections, medication effects, bone marrow suppression. Low ANC can raise infection risk.
- Lymphocytes
- High: Often viral infections; sometimes chronic immune conditions.
- Low: Stress, steroids, some immune problems.
- Monocytes
- High: Can rise during recovery from infection or in chronic inflammation.
- Eosinophils
- High: Allergies, asthma, eczema, parasites (less common), certain drug reactions.
- Basophils
- High: Sometimes allergies/inflammation; rarely certain blood disorders.
- Neutrophils (Neutrophils, ANC = Absolute Neutrophil Count)
Red blood cells (oxygen-carrying system)
- RBC (Red Blood Cell Count)
- What it is: Number of red blood cells.
- Low: Often anemia.
- High: Dehydration, high altitude, smoking, lung disease, or increased red cell production.
- Hemoglobin (Hgb)
- What it is: The oxygen-carrying protein inside red cells.
- Low: Anemia (common causes include iron deficiency, B12/folate deficiency, bleeding, chronic disease).
- High: Often dehydration or increased red cell production.
- Hematocrit (Hct)
- What it is: Percent of blood made up by red blood cells.
- Low/High: Similar causes as hemoglobin.
Red blood cell “indices” (help explain anemia type)
- MCV (Mean Corpuscular Volume)
- What it is: Average red cell size.
- Low MCV (small cells): Often iron deficiency or thalassemia trait.
- High MCV (large cells): Often B12/folate deficiency, alcohol use, liver disease, hypothyroidism, some meds.
- MCH (Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin)
- What it is: Amount of hemoglobin per red cell.
- Low: Often tracks with low MCV (iron deficiency pattern).
- MCHC (Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration)
- What it is: “How packed” each red cell is with hemoglobin.
- Low: Often iron deficiency.
- High: Less common; can be seen with certain red cell conditions or lab artifact.
- RDW (Red Cell Distribution Width)
- What it is: How varied the red cell sizes are.
- High: Mixed sizes. Common in iron deficiency, B12/folate deficiency, or recovering anemia.
Platelets (clotting system)
- Platelet count (PLT)
- What it is: Number of platelets that help blood clot.
- High: Often inflammation, iron deficiency, recovery after bleeding; sometimes bone marrow conditions.
- Low: Viral illness, medications, immune causes, liver/spleen issues, bone marrow problems. Very low can raise bleeding risk.
- MPV (Mean Platelet Volume)
- What it is: Average platelet size.
- Higher MPV: Often means the body is making newer/larger platelets.
- Lower MPV: Can be seen when platelet production is reduced.
Sometimes included on CBC reports (not always)
- Immature granulocytes
- High: Can suggest the bone marrow is reacting to infection/inflammation.
- nRBC (nucleated red blood cells)
- If present: Can indicate significant stress on blood production (interpretation depends on context).
CMP (Comprehensive Metabolic Panel)
A CMP looks at electrolytes, kidney function, liver/bile system, blood sugar, and proteins.
Electrolytes and acid–base balance
- Sodium (Na)
- What it is: Major fluid/electrolyte balance.
- Low: Overhydration, some meds, hormone issues, heart/liver/kidney problems.
- High: Dehydration is common; sometimes diabetes insipidus or excess salt/water loss.
- Potassium (K)
- What it is: Critical for heart and muscle function.
- High: Kidney issues, some meds (like ACE inhibitors/ARBs, spironolactone), cell breakdown, lab artifact.
- Low: Diuretics, vomiting/diarrhea, low intake, hormone conditions.
- Note: Big shifts can be urgent because of heart rhythm risk.
- Chloride (Cl)
- What it is: Works with sodium and acid–base status.
- High/Low: Often follows hydration status and bicarbonate changes.
- CO₂ / Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻)
- What it is: A key marker of blood “buffering” (acid–base).
- Low: Can suggest metabolic acidosis (e.g., dehydration with lactic acid, kidney issues, uncontrolled diabetes/ketones).
- High: Can suggest metabolic alkalosis (e.g., vomiting, some diuretics) or compensation for lung disease.
- Anion gap (sometimes listed)
- What it is: A calculated number used to sort out causes of acidosis.
- High: Certain types of metabolic acidosis (examples include ketones, lactic acid, kidney failure, toxins).
Blood sugar
- Glucose
- What it is: Blood sugar level.
- High: Diabetes, prediabetes, stress/illness, steroids.
- Low: Fasting too long, some diabetes meds, less commonly hormone or liver issues.
- Note: Whether you were fasting matters.
Kidney function
- BUN (Blood Urea Nitrogen)
- What it is: A waste product affected by hydration and kidney filtration.
- High: Dehydration, kidney issues, high protein intake, GI bleeding.
- Low: Less common; sometimes low protein intake or liver issues.
- Creatinine
- What it is: A waste product from muscles; used to estimate kidney filtration.
- High: Often reduced kidney function, dehydration, some meds; can be higher in muscular people.
- eGFR (Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate)
- What it is: A calculation estimating kidney filtering ability.
- Lower eGFR: Can suggest chronic kidney disease if persistent over time (interpret with age and trend).
Minerals
- Calcium
- What it is: Important for bones, nerves, muscles.
- High: Overactive parathyroid, some cancers, dehydration, certain meds/supplements.
- Low: Vitamin D issues, low albumin, kidney disease, low magnesium, other causes.
Liver and bile system
- ALT (Alanine aminotransferase)
- What it is: Enzyme mainly from liver cells.
- High: Liver irritation/injury (fatty liver, viral hepatitis, alcohol, medications, etc.).
- AST (Aspartate aminotransferase)
- What it is: Enzyme from liver and also muscle.
- High: Liver injury or muscle injury (context matters).
- Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP)
- What it is: Enzyme from bile ducts and bone.
- High: Bile duct irritation/blockage, some liver diseases, bone growth/turnover (including healing fractures).
- Total Bilirubin
- What it is: A breakdown product processed by the liver.
- High: Liver processing issues, bile flow blockage, or increased red cell breakdown; can be mildly high in benign conditions like Gilbert syndrome.
Blood proteins (nutrition, liver function, inflammation, fluid balance)
- Total Protein
- What it is: Albumin + globulins.
- High: Dehydration or increased immune proteins.
- Low: Poor nutrition/absorption, liver disease, kidney protein loss.
- Albumin
- What it is: Main blood protein made by the liver; helps keep fluid in blood vessels.
- Low: Inflammation, liver disease, kidney protein loss, poor nutrition.
- Globulin
- What it is: A group of immune-related proteins.
- High: Inflammation, infection, immune activity; sometimes specific blood protein disorders.
- A/G Ratio (Albumin/Globulin ratio)
- What it is: Relationship between albumin and globulins.
- Low: Lower albumin or higher globulins (many possible causes, depends on context).
Thyroid tests (TSH and T4)
These help assess how fast your body’s “metabolic thermostat” is running.
- TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone)
- What it is: A signal from the brain (pituitary) telling the thyroid how hard to work.
- High TSH: Often means the thyroid is underactive (hypothyroidism).
- Low TSH: Often means the thyroid is overactive (hyperthyroidism).
- Note: Pregnancy, illness, and some meds can shift TSH.
- Free T4 (Free Thyroxine) or Total T4 (depends on lab)
- What it is: The main thyroid hormone level.
- Low Free T4: Supports hypothyroidism (especially if TSH is high).
- High Free T4: Supports hyperthyroidism (especially if TSH is low).
Common pattern matching (general, not absolute):
- High TSH + Low Free T4: Typical hypothyroidism.
- Low TSH + High Free T4: Typical hyperthyroidism.
- Abnormal TSH with normal Free T4: Can be “subclinical” thyroid disease, medication effects, or temporary changes.
Lipid panel (cholesterol and triglycerides)
This estimates risk related to plaque in arteries (heart attack/stroke risk). Some results are calculated.
- Total Cholesterol
- What it is: Overall cholesterol in the blood.
- Higher: Can increase risk, but the breakdown (LDL/HDL/non-HDL) matters more than total alone.
- LDL-C (“bad cholesterol”)
- What it is: Cholesterol most associated with artery plaque.
- Higher: Generally higher cardiovascular risk.
- Lower: Generally better, especially if you already have risk factors or known heart disease.
- HDL-C (“good cholesterol”)
- What it is: Cholesterol associated with “reverse transport” (carrying cholesterol away).
- Higher: Often associated with lower risk, though it doesn’t cancel out high LDL.
- Triglycerides (TG)
- What it is: A type of fat in the blood, influenced by food, alcohol, weight, insulin resistance, genetics.
- High: Can go with insulin resistance/diabetes, fatty liver, alcohol use; very high levels can raise pancreatitis risk.
- Note: Triglycerides can rise after eating, so fasting vs non-fasting affects this number more than others.
- Non-HDL Cholesterol (often reported)
- What it is: Total cholesterol minus HDL; includes LDL and other “atherogenic” particles.
- Higher: Higher cardiovascular risk; useful when triglycerides are high.
- VLDL (often calculated)
- What it is: A triglyceride-rich particle estimate.
- Higher: Often tracks with higher triglycerides.
- Cholesterol/HDL ratio (sometimes reported)
- What it is: A rough risk marker.
- Higher ratio: Generally higher risk.
Important note: Many labs calculate LDL using triglycerides. When triglycerides are very high, calculated LDL can be less accurate.
Practical notes patients actually need
- Trends beat single tests. A “borderline” number that’s stable for years can be less concerning than one that is changing quickly.
- Context matters: dehydration, recent illness, heavy exercise, alcohol, and medications can move labs around.
- Reference ranges vary by lab. “Normal” on one report can be “slightly high” on another.
Use this as a translation key, not a diagnosis engine.
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