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The full name is the microalbumin to creatinine ratio. Microalbumin is a test used to detect small amounts of protein in the urine, which is an indicator of kidney damage. Healthy kidneys don't allow any protein to leak out into the urine. Creatinine is a normal waste product that indicates how concentrated the urine is. The microalbumin ratio gives you a number, in the units milligrams of albumin per grams of creatinine, that indicates if your kidneys are functioning properly. The lower the number is, the better.
In blood it is (>)10 to 1 at pH 7.35
20-1
No such thing as ratio decay. Sorry
The atomic ratio in this salt is 1:1. The mass ratio is 22.999:35.457 of sodium to chlorine, the ratio of the atomic weights of sodium and chlorine.
The ratio of albumin to globulin in blood serum, plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, or urine. Albumin-globulin=AG ratio. Normal adult ranges are as follows: Albumin is 3.5-5; Globulin is 2.6-4.6 which makes the normal range for the ratio 0.8-2.0.
According to the chart that came with the blood information about my current blood test, albumin is 4.1 and ALT (SGOT is 49). What does this mean? Janet
its means the ratio of albumin and globulin
60% : 40%
donot know
Approximately 3/2.
Assuming that these are adult protein values in g/dL (you crazy yankees), all the values fall within normal ranges.
An albumin/globulin ratio reversal indicates that it is less than 1.0. This may indicate neoplasm, intestinal disease, renal disease, congestive heart failure, infectious disease, liver disease, or a cachexia patient.
I also would like to know
F:T 56:44. Normal range is from 58:42 to 52:48
Range for BUN is 5 - 25, so yes. I have renal disease and my BUN is often above 25. I don't know for the other 2.
ratio of PT to normal