Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin (MCH)
Introduction
MCH is calculated as Hb divided by total RBC count.
Normal range
Adults – 27-31Pg
New born – 33- 39Pg
Indications
Limited value in differential diagnosis of anemias; Used for instrument calibration.
Increased in
Macrocytic anemia, infants and newborns, marked leukocytosis( > 50,000/cu.mm),cold agglutinins, in vivo hemolysis, monoclonal proteins in blood, high heparin concentration, lipemia.
Decreased in
Microcytic and normocytic anemias.
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Causes of lymphocytosis (> 4000/cumm in adults, > 7200/cumm adolescents, > 9000/cumm in children and infants)
Causes of lymphocytosis (> 4000/cumm in adults, > 7200/cumm adolescents, > 9000/cumm in children and infants)
Infection (Pertusis, infectious, lymphocytosis, infectious hepatitis, cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections, mumps, rubella, varicella, toxoplasmosis, chronic tuberculosis),
Others like thyrotoxicosis,
Addison's disease,
neutropenia with relative lymphocytosis,
lymphatic leukemia,
Crohn's disease,
ulcerative colitis and
infancy (normal count 40- 60 %) called relative lymphocytosis.
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV)
Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV)
Introduction
MCV is calculated as hematocrit (Hct) divided by RBC count with manual methods measured directly by automated instruments.
Normal range
Adults – 78-100Fl
Neonates- 102-115Fl.
Indications
Classification and differential diagnosis of anemia; useful screening test for occult alcoholism
Increased in (MCV > 95fL, Often > 110Fl)
All macrocytic anemias (megaloblastic anemias, Vit. B12’ folate deficiency, sprue, macrocytic anemia of pregnancy, megaloblastic anemia due to alcoholism, liver disease and hypothyroidism), infants and newborns.
Decrease in (MCV < 80FL)
Microcytic anemias
Usually hypo chromic (e.g. iron deficiency, pyridoxine – responsive thalassemia, lead poisoning), chronic disease, abnormal HbC and HbE.
Labels:
anemia,
cbc,
mcv,
megaloblastic
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