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Haematology lab tests

From Surgopaedia

Haemoglobin

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  • Reported as the concentration of haemoglobin in whole blood
  • Preferred to haematocrit for calculating anaemia because it is directly determined, whereas haematocrit is calculated from other values

Haematocrit

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  • Also called packed cell volume
  • The percentage of blood volume occupied by RBCs
  • Usually calculated as RBC count x MCV

RBC count

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  • The number of RBCs contained in a specified volume of whole blood, usually expressed as millions of cells per microL of whole blood
  • Unreliable in microcytosis

Mean corpuscular volume (MCV)

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  • Average volume of RBC

Mean corpuscular haemoglobin

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  • Average Hb content in an RBC
  • Hypochromia on the blood smear means low MCH - enlarged area of central pallor in RBCs - seen in iron deficiency and thalassaemia

Mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration (MCHC)

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  • Average Hb concentration per RBC
  • Very low values are typical of IDA
  • Very high values reflect spherocytosis or RBC agglutination

Red cell distribution width (RDW)

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  • Measure of the variation in RBC size
  • Reflected in the degree of anisocytosis on the peripheral blood smear
  • High RDW implies large variation in RBC size - seen in IDA, B12 or folate deficiency, MDS, haemoglobinopathies, and patients who have received transfusions

Reticulocytes

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  • The stage in RBC development directly before the mature RBC. Continually produced to replace RBCs cleared from circulation.
  • Reticulocyte count reflects the rate of RBC production.
  • Reported as a percentage of total RBCs or as an absolute count
  • At steady state, should be 1-2% or 25,000 to 1000,000 per microL
  • Expected to be high in anaemia - a normal BM can increase the rate of RBC production 5x in adults, 7-8x in children

Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)

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  • Abundant in RBCs - high levels can be a marker of haemolysis
  • Can be elevated in MI, peaking 3-4 days later
  • Reflects overall rate of tissue turnover in the body

Bilirubin

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  • Created as part of the heme recycling process

Haptoglobin

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  • Created in liver, binds to haemoglobin breakdown products, then the complex is metabolised in the liver
  • Low levels means highly bound to haemoglobin
  • Low haptoglobin is likely to be due to haemolysis (specificity of level <25mg/dL is 96%)
  • Undetectable almost always due to haemolysis
  • Normal or increased haptoglobin does not eliminate haemolysis