HEMOGLOBIN (Hb%) – MALE
Method: Automated Hematology Analyzer / Cyanmethemoglobin Method
| Parameter | Result | Units | Reference Range | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | 14.2 | g/dL | 13–17 | Normal |
Hemoglobin (Hb) is an iron-containing oxygen transport protein present in red blood cells. It is responsible for carrying oxygen from the lungs to body tissues and transporting carbon dioxide back to the lungs. Hemoglobin estimation is commonly used for evaluation of anemia, blood loss, nutritional deficiency states, polycythemia, and chronic systemic disorders.
• Hemoglobin level is within normal male reference range.
• No significant evidence of anemia detected.
• Clinical correlation recommended if symptoms persist.
Low Hemoglobin: May suggest iron deficiency anemia, nutritional deficiency,
blood loss, chronic disease, renal disorders, or bone marrow suppression.
High Hemoglobin: May occur in dehydration, smoking, chronic hypoxia,
high-altitude exposure, chronic lung disease, or polycythemia.
Note: Hemoglobin values should always be interpreted along with RBC indices, hematocrit, peripheral smear findings, and clinical history. This report is not valid for medico-legal purposes.
`HEMOGLOBIN (Hb%) – FEMALE
Method: Automated Hematology Analyzer / Cyanmethemoglobin Method
| Parameter | Result | Units | Reference Range | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | 12.8 | g/dL | 12–15 | Normal |
Hemoglobin (Hb) is an iron-containing oxygen transport protein present in red blood cells. It is responsible for carrying oxygen from the lungs to body tissues and transporting carbon dioxide back to the lungs. Hemoglobin estimation is commonly used for evaluation of anemia, blood loss, nutritional deficiency states, polycythemia, and chronic systemic disorders.
• Hemoglobin level is within normal female reference range.
• No significant evidence of anemia detected.
• Clinical correlation recommended if symptoms persist.
Low Hemoglobin: May suggest iron deficiency anemia, nutritional deficiency,
blood loss, chronic disease, renal disorders, or bone marrow suppression.
High Hemoglobin: May occur in dehydration, smoking, chronic hypoxia,
high-altitude exposure, chronic lung disease, or polycythemia.
Note: Hemoglobin values should always be interpreted along with RBC indices, hematocrit, peripheral smear findings, and clinical history. This report is not valid for medico-legal purposes.
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