Want this question answered?
g/dL
YES YES YES YES! Hematocrit, Hemoglobin, as well as a variety of electrolytes!!
Go to the school administration and ask the secretary for the results from your technical courses you took this past July.
gm/dl; GRAMS of hemoglobin that are present in a DECILITER of a blood sample
Clinically significant hemolysis is rare problem but it can affect red blood cell count and density of plasma. Studies have been done about the effect of hemolysis on hematocrit and the results stated that the changes appear too small to be accurately detected.
so you can try to see exactly which factors are affecting the dependent variable (the thing you're measuring) "it gives you something to compare your results to" is the basic Y9-GCSE answer =]
Anemia
yes
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yes
Hematocrit is the concentration of cells in the blood, measured by the relationship between the cells in the blood (red and white) and the liquid part of the blood called plasma. Normally the less amount of liquid in the body the fewer amounts there will be in the blood itself, therefore the cell/plasma ratio will decrease making the blood more concentrated. That's why the bigger the dehydration, the higher the hematocrit.
i am also looking for those results everywhere but cant get them.