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Normocytic and normochromic blood is normal.
no
Normocytic anemia (normal MCV) can be caused by kidney and liver disease, bone marrow disorders, or excessive bleeding or hemolysis of the red blood cells.
Anisocytosis normocytic normochromic means there is a variation in the size of red blood cells in a person. This can be caused by a folate or iron deficiency.
That's not a condition to be treated, it's a result from a complete blood count. Just like you can't say "how do you treat pain" or "how do you treat fever," there is not answer for your question. Talk to your health care provider for further information, as s/he has the complete picture given your history and physical, rather than one isolated test.
It's not possible to answer without further information. If you lose half your blood volume, you will have life-threatening normocytic, normochromic anemia. Ask your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.
Your hemoglobin percentage is okay. You red blood cells are normocytic and normochromic. When blood forming system or hematopoeitic system over work, you can reticulocytes in the circulation. They are the red blood cells with the nucleus.
red blood cells which are normal in size and shape but have low percentage of hemoglobin for more detail visit:www.infopharma.weebly.com
You describe a normal complete blood count. That is a finding separate from the HIV test. Whether you need an HIV test is not based on the complete blood count; instead, you should have an HIV test based on your risk factors for acquiring HIV.
'Normo' means normal 'cytic' means cell size 'chromic' means color Thus, normocytic normochromic red cells are normal sized, normal colored red cells. The size and color of cells is often measured when evaluating anemia. But just because the blood appears normal, does not mean there is not a problem. For instance anemia due to acute blood loss will be normocytic normochromic.
Angiography is when you record a picture of the blood vessels.
Normocytic means, literally, "normal cell." It's often used in the context of describing anemia, where it indicates cells of normal size, rather than those that are too big, which are macrocytic, or too small, which are microcytic.* Cell size (blood cells): (Terms that refer to cellular size end with "cytic".) normocytes (normal) microcytes (smaller than normal) macrocytes (larger than normal) anisocytes (various sizes)