COMPLETE BLOOD COUNT (CBC)
Method: Automated Hematology Analyzer (5-Part Differential) with smear correlation
| Parameter | Result | Units | Reference Range | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | 13.5 | g/dL | M: 13–17 | F: 12–15 | Normal |
| RBC Count | 4.8 | ×10⁶/µL | 4.5–5.5 | Normal |
| Hematocrit | 42 | % | 36–50 | Normal |
| MCV | 88 | fL | 80–100 | Normal |
| MCH | 29 | pg | 27–32 | Normal |
| MCHC | 34 | g/dL | 32–36 | Normal |
| RDW | 13 | % | 11.5–14.5 | Normal |
| Total WBC | 7800 | /µL | 4,000–11,000 | Normal |
| Platelets | 250000 | /µL | 150,000–450,000 | Normal |
| Cell Type | Result (%) | Reference Range | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neutrophils | 55 | 40–75% | Normal |
| Lymphocytes | 30 | 20–45% | Normal |
| Monocytes | 6 | 2–10% | Normal |
| Eosinophils | 3 | 1–6% | Normal |
| Basophils | 0.5 | 0–1% | Normal |
RBC: Normocytic normochromic red blood cells.
WBC: Total and differential leukocyte counts are within normal limits.
Platelets: Adequate in number with normal morphology.
Complete Blood Count (CBC) is a routine hematological investigation used to evaluate hemoglobin status, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. It assists in screening for anemia, infection, inflammatory disorders, hematological diseases, and platelet abnormalities.
• Hematological parameters are within normal physiological limits.
• No evidence of anemia, leukocytosis, leukopenia, or platelet abnormality.
• Peripheral smear morphology appears unremarkable.
• Clinical correlation recommended if symptoms persist.
Note: Reference ranges may vary depending on age, gender, hydration status, infection, medications, and laboratory methodology. Clinical correlation is recommended. This report is not valid for medico-legal purposes.
COMPLETE BLOOD COUNT (CBC)
Method: Automated Hematology Analyzer (5-Part Differential) with smear correlation
| Parameter | Result | Units | Reference Range | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | 8.6 | g/dL | M: 13–17 | F: 12–15 | Low |
| RBC Count | 3.4 | ×10⁶/µL | 4.5–5.5 | Low |
| Hematocrit | 28 | % | 36–50 | Low |
| MCV | 72 | fL | 80–100 | Low |
| MCH | 22 | pg | 27–32 | Low |
| MCHC | 29 | g/dL | 32–36 | Low |
| RDW | 18.5 | % | 11.5–14.5 | High |
| Total WBC | 15,800 | /µL | 4,000–11,000 | High |
| Platelets | 520,000 | /µL | 150,000–450,000 | High |
| Cell Type | Result (%) | Reference Range | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neutrophils | 82 | 40–75% | High |
| Lymphocytes | 12 | 20–45% | Low |
| Monocytes | 4 | 2–10% | Normal |
| Eosinophils | 2 | 1–6% | Normal |
| Basophils | 0 | 0–1% | Normal |
RBC: Microcytic hypochromic anemia with anisopoikilocytosis.
WBC: Neutrophilic leukocytosis noted. No atypical cells seen.
Platelets: Thrombocytosis present; platelet morphology appears adequate.
• Moderate microcytic hypochromic anemia suggestive of iron deficiency anemia.
• Neutrophilic leukocytosis likely related to acute infection or inflammatory process.
• Reactive thrombocytosis noted.
• Clinical correlation with iron profile, ferritin, and inflammatory markers is recommended.
• Iron deficiency anemia
• Acute bacterial infection
• Chronic inflammatory disorders
• Blood loss / gastrointestinal bleeding
• Nutritional deficiency states
• Reactive marrow response
Note: Hematological values should be interpreted in conjunction with clinical findings and relevant biochemical investigations. This report is not valid for medico-legal purposes.
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