Reticulocytes are immature red blood cells. The reticulocyte count is most useful if you have anemia (low red blood cell count).
A low reticulocyte count means your body is not making enough red blood cells in the first place. There may be a problem with your bone marrow.
A high reticulocyte count means you are losing your red blood cells after you make them, maybe because of bleeding or red blood cells that break down too quickly.
No, it is still within the normal range.
NL is often used to indicate "normal limits" or "normal.""Nl" stands for "normal". You'll often see it written as WNL which means "within normal limits".
Sometimes having periods within a short time can indicate fibroids and you should see your doctor as you can become anemic.
34.1% of the data values fall between (mean-1sd) and the mean.
A normal reading can depend on the context, but generally speaking, a normal reading refers to values within a typical or healthy range for a given measurement or test. It typically indicates that everything is functioning as expected or within established norms.
The Empirical Rule states that 68% of the data falls within 1 standard deviation from the mean. Since 1000 data values are given, take .68*1000 and you have 680 values are within 1 standard deviation from the mean.
Range can include outliers that are not normal values and can skew overall data. Most relevant values can be found within one or two standard deviations on a normal curve.
For data sets having a normal, bell-shaped distribution, the following properties apply: About 68% of all values fall within 1 standard deviation of the mean About 95% of all values fall within 2 standard deviation of the mean About 99.7% of all values fall within 3 standard deviation of the mean.
Assuming that these are adult protein values in g/dL (you crazy yankees), all the values fall within normal ranges.
The circulatory system and the heart work together to maintain blood pressure within a normal range of values
CO2 regulates the body breathing functions. The normal range is 23 to 32. A level of 31 is within the normal range. High levels of CO2 could indicate a breathing problem.
Its completely normal to find albumin in urine, the normal reference range is from 0-8 mg/dL, with a slight difference in the range from lab to lab. Increased values however indicate a variety of diseases, e.g. Amylodiosis, SLE, diabetic nephropathy, glomerulonephritis or even heavy metal poisoning Positive presence of albumin in the urine is perfectly normal, if it is within the normal reference range, being from 0-8 mg/dL. Increased levels of albumin in the urine however, might indicate the presence of a disease, e.g. SLE, diabetic nephropathy, glomerulonephritis, heavy metal poisoning, ...etc.