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these are lab blood results
Most often this is due to iron deficiency, but it can also occur in other red blood cell production (hematopoietic) abnormalities.
MCHC it's how much of the volume in one erythrocyte is occupied by meoglobin. MCHC=(Hb%/pcv%) *100 normal value = 30%-38% while MCV it's the amount of hemoglobin in one erythrocyte. mcv = (pcv/RBCs)*10 normal value 27-32pg (picogram)
RDW stands for red cell distribution width and it shows the variation of the size of your red blood cells. I dont really understand what 17 is, is it fl/L which is extremely low, or %, which is in the upper limit. I'm gonna go ahead and presume its % then its affected by your MCV. Basically, 17 means that you have a lot of different sizes of RBC-s.
The force that keeps an electron moving around the nucleus is the electric force. The balance of the electric force and the centrifugal force gives the quantum redshift.0= e^2zc/4pi r^2 -mcv/r cos(V) gives cos(V) = Alpha/n the redshift, where Alpha is the Fine Structure Constant 7.2E-3.
MCV(mean cell volume). Increased mcv is a sign of macrocytosis which may be related to anaemia due to deficiency of vit.B12 and/or folic acid with the occurence of megaloblasts in the bone marrow.
my mcv in blood test is 77? my mch is 26 and my hemoglobin is 122. what does it mean?
mcv high
iron deficiency
microcytic hypochromic anaemia
MCH = Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin. It is a measure of the amount of hemoglobin in your red blood cells. The ref. range for adults is between 28-32. MCH [similar to the MCV] is elevated in: hereditary anemia(s), megaloblastic anemias (pernicious, folic acid deficiency, B12 deficiency), reticulocytosis, artifact (aplasia, myelofibrosis, hyperglycemia, cold agglutinins), liver disease, hypothyroidism, Drugs (anti-convulsants), zidovidune treatment (AIDS).
An elevated MCV is associated with alcoholism, Vitamin B12 and/or Folic Acid deficiency.
What does this mean? I have a high WBC of 11.1 and MCH is 31.7
these are lab blood results
the T4-free,MCV,MCH,NEUTROPHILS AND LYMPHOCYTES affect the same way there are relater and dangerous and can you explain to me how everything work please and what should I do
On a hematology lab report, MCV usually is meant to indicate the mean cellular volume of red blood cells. Normal values for MCV are between 80-100 fL for most adults. A low MCV could indicate many different things. The most common or prevalent being anemia. There are many different kinds of anemia, and there is no way to diagnose anemia without other laboratory testing. It could be iron deficiency anemia or it could be a range of genetic variations in hemoglobin composition, known collectively as thalassemias.
The equivalent Roman numerals of MCV are 1105 in Arabic numerals