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- Version: 2.1
- Last-modified: September 10, 1997
- Archive-name: pathology/lab-test-interpretation
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- URL: http://www.neosoft.com/~uthman
- Maintainer: Ed Uthman <uthman@neosoft.com>
-
- INTERPRETATION OF LAB TEST PROFILES
-
- Ed Uthman, MD <uthman@neosoft.com>
- Diplomate, American Board of Pathology
-
- The various multiparameter blood chemistry and hematology profiles
- offered by most labs represent an economical way by which a large
- amount of information concerning a patient's physiologic status can be
- made available to the physician. The purpose of this monograph is to
- serve as a reference for the interpretation of abnormalities of each of
- the parameters.
-
- REFERENCE RANGES ("normal ranges")
-
- Because reference ranges (except for some lipid studies) are
- typically defined as the range of values of the median 95% of
- the healthy population, it is unlikely that a given specimen,
- even from a healthy patient, will show "normal" values for all
- the tests in a lengthy profile. Therefore, caution should be
- exercised to prevent overreaction to miscellaneous, mild
- abnormalities without clinical correlate.
-
- UNITS OF MEASUREMENT: America against the world
-
- American labs use a different version of the metric system than
- does most of the rest of the world, which uses the Systeme
- Internationale (SI). In some cases translation between the two
- systems is easy, but the difference between the two is most
- pronounced in measurement of chemical concentration. The
- American system generally uses mass per unit volume, while SI
- uses moles per unit volume. Since mass per mole varies with the
- molecular weight of the analyte, conversion between American and
- SI units requires many different conversion factors. Where
- appropriate, in this paper SI units are given after American
- units.
-
- SODIUM
-
- Increase in serum sodium is seen in conditions with water loss
- in excess of salt loss, as in profuse sweating, severe diarrhea
- or vomiting, polyuria (as in diabetes mellitus or insipidus),
- hypergluco- or mineralocorticoidism, and inadequate water
- intake. Drugs causing elevated sodium include steroids with
- mineralocorticoid activity, carbenoxolone, diazoxide,
- guanethidine, licorice, methyldopa, oxyphenbutazone, sodium
- bicarbonate, methoxyflurane, and reserpine.
-
- Decrease in sodium is seen in states characterized by intake of
- free water or hypotonic solutions, as may occur in fluid
- replacement following sweating, diarrhea, vomiting, and diuretic
- abuse. Dilutional hyponatremia may occur in cardiac failure,
- liver failure, nephrotic syndrome, malnutrition, and SIADH.
- There are many other causes of hyponatremia, mostly related to
- corticosteroid metabolic defects or renal tubular abnormalities.
- Drugs other than diuretics may cause hyponatremia, including
- ammonium chloride, chlorpropamide, heparin, aminoglutethimide,
- vasopressin, cyclophosphamide, and vincristine.
-
- POTASSIUM
-
- Increase in serum potassium is seen in states characterized by
- excess destruction of cells, with redistribution of K+ from the
- intra- to the extracellular compartment, as in massive
- hemolysis, crush injuries, hyperkinetic activity, and malignant
- hyperpyrexia. Decreased renal K+ excretion is seen in acute
- renal failure, some cases of chronic renal failure, Addison's
- disease, and other sodium-depleted states. Hyperkalemia due to
- pure excess of K+ intake is usually iatrogenic.
-
- Drugs causing hyperkalemia include amiloride, aminocaproic acid,
- antineoplastic agents, epinephrine, heparin, histamine,
- indomethacin, isoniazid, lithium, mannitol, methicillin,
- potassium salts of penicillin, phenformin, propranolol, salt
- substitutes, spironolactone, succinylcholine, tetracycline,
- triamterene, and tromethamine. Spurious hyperkalemia can be seen
- when a patient exercises his/her arm with the tourniquet in
- place prior to venipuncture. Hemolysis and marked thrombocytosis
- may cause false elevations of serum K+ as well. Failure to
- promptly separate serum from cells in a clot tube is a notorious
- source of falsely elevated potassium.
-
- Decrease in serum potassium is seen usually in states
- characterized by excess K+ loss, such as in vomiting, diarrhea,
- villous adenoma of the colorectum, certain renal tubular
- defects, hypercorticoidism, etc. Redistribution hypokalemia is
- seen in glucose/insulin therapy, alkalosis (where serum K+ is
- lost into cells and into urine), and familial periodic
- paralysis. Drugs causing hypokalemia include amphotericin,
- carbenicillin, carbenoxolone, corticosteroids, diuretics,
- licorice, salicylates, and ticarcillin.
-
- CHLORIDE
-
- Increase in serum chloride is seen in dehydration, renal
- tubular acidosis, acute renal failure, diabetes insipidus,
- prolonged diarrhea, salicylate toxicity, respiratory alkalosis,
- hypothalamic lesions, and adrenocortical hyperfunction. Drugs
- causing increased chloride include acetazolamide, androgens,
- corticosteroids, cholestyramine, diazoxide, estrogens,
- guanethidine, methyldopa, oxyphenbutazone, phenylbutazone,
- thiazides, and triamterene. Bromides in serum will not be
- distinguished from chloride in routine testing, so intoxication
- may show spuriously increased chloride [see also "Anion gap,"
- below].
-
- Decrease in serum chloride is seen in excessive sweating,
- prolonged vomiting, salt-losing nephropathy, adrenocortical
- defficiency, various acid base disturbances, conditions
- characterized by expansion of extracellular fluid volume, acute
- intermittent porphyria, SIADH, etc. Drugs causing decreased
- chloride include bicarbonate, carbenoxolone, corticosteroids,
- diuretics, laxatives, and theophylline.
-
- CO2 CONTENT
-
- Increase in serum CO2 content for the most part reflects
- increase in serum bicarbonate (HCO3-) concentration rather than
- dissolved CO2 gas, or PCO2 (which accounts for only a small
- fraction of the total). Increased serum bicarbonate is seen in
- compensated respiratory acidosis and in metabolic alkalosis.
- Diuretics (thiazides, ethacrynic acid, furosemide, mercurials),
- corticosteroids (in long term use), and laxatives (when abused)
- may cause increased bicarbonate.
-
- Decrease in blood CO2 is seen in metabolic acidosis and
- compensated respiratory alkalosis. Substances causing metabolic
- acidosis include ammonium chloride, acetazolamide, ethylene
- glycol, methanol, paraldehyde, and phenformin. Salicylate
- poisoning is characterized by early respiratory alkalosis
- followed by metabolic acidosis with attendant decreased
- bicarbonate.
-
- Critical studies on bicarbonate are best done on anaerobically
- collected heparinized whole blood (as for blood gas
- determination) because of interaction of blood and atmosphere in
- routinely collected serum specimens. Routine electrolyte panels
- are usually not collected in this manner.
-
- The tests "total CO2" and "CO2 content" measure essentially the
- same thing. The "PCO2" component of blood gas analysis is a test
- of the ventilatory component of pulmonary function only.
-
- ANION GAP
-
- Increased serum anion gap reflects the presence of unmeasured
- anions, as in uremia (phosphate, sulfate), diabetic ketoacidosis
- (acetoacetate, beta-hydroxybutyrate), shock, exercise-induced
- physiologic anaerobic glycolysis, fructose and phenformin
- administration (lactate), and poisoning by methanol (formate),
- ethylene glycol (oxalate), paraldehyde, and salicylates. Therapy
- with diuretics, penicillin, and carbenicillin may also elevate
- the anion gap.
-
- Decreased serum anion gap is seen in dilutional states and
- hyperviscosity syndromes associated with paraproteinemias.
- Because bromide is not distinguished from chloride in some
- methodologies, bromide intoxication may appear to produce a
- decreased anion gap.
-
- GLUCOSE
-
- Hyperglycemia can be diagnosed only in relation to time
- elapsed after meals and after ruling out spurious influences
- (especially drugs, including caffeine, corticosteroids,
- estrogens, indomethacin, oral contraceptives, lithium,
- phenytoin, furosemide, thiazides, thyroxine, and many more).
- Generally, fasting blood glucose >140 mg/dL (7.8mmol/L) and/or
- 2h postprandial glucose >200 mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L) demonstrated on
- several occasions is suggestive of diabetes mellitus; oral
- glucose tolerance test is usually not required for diagnosis.
-
- In adults, hypoglycemia can be observed in certain neoplasms
- (islet cell tumor, adrenal and gastric carcinoma, fibrosarcoma,
- hepatoma), severe liver disease, poisonings (arsenic, CCl4,
- chloroform, cinchophen, phosphorous, alcohol, salicylates,
- phenformin, and antihistamines), adrenocortical insufficiency,
- hypothroidism, and functional disorders (postgastrectomy,
- gastroenterostomy, autonomic nervous system disorders). Failure
- to promptly separate serum from cells in a blood collection tube
- causes falsely depressed glucose levels. If delay in
- transporting a blood glucose to the lab is anticipated, the
- specimen should be collected in a fluoride-containing tube
- (gray-top in the US, yellow in the UK).
-
- UREA NITROGEN (BUN)
-
- Serum urea nitrogen (BUN) is increased in acute and chronic
- intrinsic renal disease, in states characterized by decreased
- effective circulating blood volume with decreased renal
- perfusion, in postrenal obstruction of urine flow, and in high
- protein intake states.
-
- Decreased serum urea nitrogen (BUN) is seen in high
- carbohydrate/low protein diets, states characterized by
- increased anabolic demand (late pregnancy, infancy, acromegaly),
- malabsorption states, and severe liver damage.
-
- In Europe, the test is called simply "urea."
-
- CREATININE
-
- Increase in serum creatinine is seen any renal functional
- impairment. Because of its insensitivity in detecting early
- renal failure, the creatinine clearance is significantly reduced
- before any rise in serum creatinine occurs. The renal impairment
- may be due to intrinsic renal lesions, decreased perfusion of
- the kidney, or obstruction of the lower urinary tract.
-
- Nephrotoxic drugs and other chemicals include:
-
- antimony arsenic bismuth cadmium
- copper gold iron lead
- lithium mercury silver thallium
- uranium aminopyrine ibuprofen indomethacin
- naproxen fenoprofen phenylbutazone phenacetin
- salicylates aminoglycosides amphotericin cephalothin
- colistin cotrimoxazole erythromycin ampicillin
- methicillin oxacillin polymixin B rifampin
- sulfonamides tetracyclines vancomycin benzene
- zoxazolamine tetrachloroethylene ethylene glycol
- acetazolamide aminocaproic acid aminosalicylate boric acid
- cyclophosphamide cisplatin dextran (LMW) furosemide
- mannitol methoxyflurane mithramycin penicillamine
- pentamide phenindione quinine thiazides
- carbon tetrachloride
-
- Deranged metabolic processes may cause increases in serum
- creatinine, as in acromegaly and hyperthyroidism, but dietary
- protein intake does not influence the serum level (as opposed to
- the situation with BUN). Some substances interfere with the
- colorimetric system used to measure creatinine, including
- acetoacetate, ascorbic acid, levodopa, methyldopa, glucose and
- fructose. Decrease in serum creatinine is seen in pregnancy and
- in conditions characterized by muscle wasting.
-
- BUN:CREATININE RATIO
-
- BUN:creatinine ratio is usually >20:1 in prerenal and postrenal
- azotemia, and <12:1 in acute tubular necrosis. Other intrinsic
- renal disease characteristically produces a ratio between these
- values.
-
- The BUN:creatinine ratio is not widely reported in the UK.
-
- URIC ACID
-
- Increase in serum uric acid is seen idiopathically and in renal
- failure, disseminated neoplasms, toxemia of pregnancy,
- psoriasis, liver disease, sarcoidosis, ethanol consumption, etc.
- Many drugs elevate uric acid, including most diuretics,
- catecholamines, ethambutol, pyrazinamide, salicylates, and large
- doses of nicotinic acid.
-
- Decreased serum uric acid level may not be of clinical
- significance. It has been reported in Wilson's disease,
- Fanconi's syndrome, xanthinuria, and (paradoxically) in some
- neoplasms, including Hodgkin's disease, myeloma, and
- bronchogenic carcinoma.
-
- INORGANIC PHOSPHORUS
-
- Hyperphosphatemia may occur in myeloma, Paget's disease of
- bone, osseous metastases, Addison's disease, leukemia,
- sarcoidosis, milk-alkali syndrome, vitamin D excess, healing
- fractures, renal failure, hypoparathyroidism, diabetic
- ketoacidosis, acromegaly, and malignant hyperpyrexia. Drugs
- causing serum phosphorous elevation include androgens,
- furosemide, growth hormone, hydrochlorthiazide, oral
- contraceptives, parathormone, and phosphates.
-
- Hypophosphatemia can be seen in a variety of biochemical
- derangements, incl. acute alcohol intoxication, sepsis,
- hypokalemia, malabsorption syndromes, hyperinsulinism,
- hyperparathyroidism, and as result of drugs, e.g.,
- acetazolamide, aluminum-containing antacids, anesthetic agents,
- anticonvulsants, and estrogens (incl. oral contraceptives).
- Citrates, mannitol, oxalate, tartrate, and phenothiazines may
- produce spuriously low phosphorous by interference with the
- assay.
-
- CALCIUM
-
- Hypercalcemia is seen in malignant neoplasms (with or without
- bone involvement), primary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism,
- sarcoidosis, vitamin D intoxication, milk-alkali syndrome,
- Paget's disease of bone (with immobilization), thyrotoxicosis,
- acromegaly, and diuretic phase of renal acute tubular necrosis.
- For a given total calcium level, acidosis increases the
- physiologically active ionized form of calcium. Prolonged
- tourniquet pressure during venipuncture may spuriously increase
- total calcium. Drugs producing hypercalcemia include alkaline
- antacids, DES, diuretics (chronic administration), estrogens
- (incl. oral contraceptives), and progesterone.
-
- Hypocalcemia must be interpreted in relation to serum albumin
- concentration (Some laboratories report a "corrected calcium" or
- "adjusted calcium" which relate the calcium assay to a normal
- albumin. The normal albumin, and hence the calculation, varies
- from laboratory to laboratory). True decrease in the
- physiologically active ionized form of Ca++ occurs in many
- situations, including hypoparathyroidism, vitamin D deficiency,
- chronic renal failure, Mg++ deficiency, prolonged anticonvulsant
- therapy, acute pancreatitis, massive transfusion, alcoholism,
- etc. Drugs producing hypocalcemiainclude most diuretics,
- estrogens, fluorides, glucose, insulin, excessive laxatives,
- magnesium salts, methicillin, and phosphates.
-
- IRON
-
- Serum iron may be increased in hemolytic, megaloblastic, and
- aplastic anemias, and in hemochromatosis, acute leukemia, lead
- poisoning, pyridoxine deficiency, thalassemia, excessive iron
- therapy, and after repeated transfusions. Drugs causing
- increased serum iron include chloramphenicol, cisplatin,
- estrogens (including oral contraceptives), ethanol, iron
- dextran, and methotrexate.
-
- Iron can be decreased in iron-deficiency anemia, acute and
- chronic infections, carcinoma, nephrotic syndrome,
- hypothyroidism, in protein- calorie malnutrition, and after
- surgery.
-
- ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE (ALP)
-
- Increased serum alkaline phosphatase is seen in states of
- increased osteoblastic activity (hyperparathyroidism,
- osteomalacia, primary and metastatic neoplasms), hepatobiliary
- diseases characterized by some degree of intra- or extrahepatic
- cholestasis, and in sepsis, chronic inflammatory bowel disease,
- and thyrotoxicosis. Isoenzyme determination may help determine
- the organ/tissue responsible for an alkaline phosphatase
- elevation.
-
- Decreased serum alkaline phosphatase may not be clinically
- significant. However, decreased serum levels have been observed
- in hypothyroidism, scurvy, kwashiokor, achrondroplastic
- dwarfism, deposition of radioactive materials in bone, and in
- the rare genetic condition hypophosphatasia.
-
- There are probably more variations in the way in which alkaline
- phosphatase is assayed than any other enzyme. Therefore, the
- reporting units vary from place to place. The reference range
- for the assaying laboratory must be carefully studied when
- interpreting any individual result.
-
- LACTATE DEHYDROGENASE (LD or "LDH")
-
- Increase of LD activity in serum may occur in any injury that
- causes loss of cell cytoplasm. More specific information can be
- obtained by LD isoenzyme studies. Also, elevation of serum LD is
- observed due to in vivo effects of anesthetic agents,
- clofibrate, dicumarol, ethanol, fluorides, imipramine,
- methotrexate, mithramycin, narcotic analgesics, nitrofurantoin,
- propoxyphene, quinidine, and sulfonamides.
-
- Decrease of serum LD is probably not clinically significant.
-
- There are two main analytical methods for measuring LD:
- pyruvate->lactate and lactate->pyruvate. Assay conditions
- (particularly temperature) vary among labs. The reference range
- for the assaying laboratory must be carefully studied when
- interpreting any individual result.
-
- Many European labs assay alpha-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase
- (HBD or HBDH), which roughly equates to LD isoenzymes 1 and 2
- (the fractions found in heart, red blood cells, and kidney).
-
- ALT (SGPT)
-
- Increase of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT, formerly
- called "SGPT") is seen in any condition involving necrosis of
- hepatocytes, myocardial cells, erythrocytes, or skeletal muscle
- cells. [See "Bilirubin, total," below]
-
- AST (SGOT)
-
- Increase of aspartate aminotransferase (AST, formerly called
- "SGOT") is seen in any condition involving necrosis of
- hepatocytes, myocardial cells, or skeletal muscle cells. [See
- "Bilirubin, total," below] Decreased serum AST is of no known
- clinical significance.
-
- GGTP (GAMMA-GT)
-
- Gamma-glutamyltransferase is markedly increased in lesions
- which cause intrahepatic or extrahepatic obstruction of bile
- ducts, including parenchymatous liver diseases with a major
- cholestatic component (e.g., cholestatic hepatitis). Lesser
- elevations of gamma-GT are seen in other liver diseases, and in
- infectious mononucleosis, hyperthyroidism, myotonic dystrophy,
- and after renal allograft. Drugs causing hepatocellular damage
- and cholestasis may also cause gamma-GT elevation (see under
- "Total bilirubin," below).
-
- Gamma-GT is a very sensitive test for liver damage, and
- unexpected, unexplained mild elevations are common. Alcohol
- consumption is a common culprit.
-
- Decreased gamma-GT is not clinically significant.
-
- BILIRUBIN
-
- Serum total bilirubin is increased in hepatocellular damage
- (infectious hepatitis, alcoholic and other toxic hepatopathy,
- neoplasms), intra- and extrahepatic biliary tract obstruction,
- intravascular and extravascular hemolysis, physiologic neonatal
- jaundice, Crigler-Najjar syndrome, Gilbert's disease,
- Dubin-Johnson syndrome, and fructose intolerance.
-
- Drugs known to cause cholestasis include the following:
-
- aminosalicylic acid androgens azathioprine benzodiazepines
- carbamazepine carbarsone chlorpropamide propoxyphene
- estrogens penicillin gold Na thiomalate imipramine
- meprobamate methimazole nicotinic acid progestins
- penicillin phenothiazines oral contraceptives
- sulfonamides sulfones erythromycin estolate
-
- Drugs known to cause hepatocellular damage include the
- following:
-
- acetaminophen allopurinol aminosalicylic acid amitriptyline
- androgens asparaginase aspirin azathioprine
- carbamazepine chlorambucil chloramphenicol chlorpropamide
- dantrolene disulfiram estrogens ethanol
- ethionamide halothane ibuprofen indomethacin
- iron salts isoniazid MAO inhibitors mercaptopurine
- methotrexate methoxyflurane methyldopa mithramycin
- nicotinic acid nitrofurantoin oral contraceptives papaverine
- paramethadione penicillin phenobarbital phenazopyridine
- phenylbutazone phenytoin probenecid procainamide
- propylthiouracil pyrazinamide quinidine sulfonamides
- tetracyclines trimethadione valproic acid
-
- Disproportionate elevation of direct (conjugated) bilirubin is
- seen in cholestasis and late in the course of chronic liver
- disease. Indirect (unconjugated) bilirubin tends to predominate
- in hemolysis and Gilbert's disease.
-
- Decreased serum total bilirubin is probably not of clinical
- significance but has been observed in iron deficiency anemia.
-
- TOTAL PROTEIN
-
- Increase in serum total protein reflects increases in albumin,
- globulin, or both. Generally significantly increased total
- protein is seen in volume contraction, venous stasis, or in
- hypergammaglobulinemia.
-
- Decrease in serum total protein reflects decreases in albumin,
- globulin or both [see "Albumin" and "Globulin, A/G ratio,"
- below].
-
- ALBUMIN
-
- Increased absolute serum albumin content is not seen as a
- natural condition. Relative increase may occur in
- hemoconcentration. Absolute increase may occur artificially by
- infusion of hyperoncotic albumin suspensions.
-
- Decreased serum albumin is seen in states of decreased
- synthesis (malnutrition, malabsorption, liver disease, and other
- chronic diseases), increased loss (nephrotic syndrome, many GI
- conditions, thermal burns, etc.), and increased catabolism
- (thyrotoxicosis, cancer chemotherapy, Cushing's disease,
- familial hypoproteinemia).
-
- GLOBULIN, A/G RATIO
-
- Globulin is increased disproportionately to albumin
- (decreasing the albumin/globulin ratio) in states characterized
- by chronic inflammation and in B-lymphocyte neoplasms, like
- myeloma and Waldenstr÷m's macroglobulinemia. More relevant
- information concerning increased globulin may be obtained by
- serum protein electrophoresis.
-
- Decreased globulin may be seen in congenital or acquired
- hypogammaglobulinemic states. Serum and urine protein
- electrophoresis may help to better define the clinical problem.
-
- T3 UPTAKE
-
- This test measures the amount of thyroxine-binding globulin
- (TBG) in the patient's serum. When TBG is increased, T3 uptake
- is decreased, and vice versa. T3 Uptake does not measure the
- level of T3 or T4 in serum.
-
- Increased T3 uptake (decreased TBG) in euthyroid patients is
- seen in chronic liver disease, protein-losing states, and with
- use of the following drugs: androgens, barbiturates,
- bishydroxycourmarin, chlorpropamide, corticosteroids, danazol,
- d-thyroxine, penicillin, phenylbutazone, valproic acid, and
- androgens. It is also seen in hyperthyroidism.
-
- Decreased T3 uptake (increased TBG) may occur due to the
- effects of exogenous estrogens (including oral contraceptives),
- pregnancy, acute hepatitis, and in genetically-determined
- elevations of TBG. Drugs producing increased TBG include
- clofibrate, lithium, methimazole, phenothiazines, and
- propylthiouracil. Decreased T3 uptake may occur in
- hypothyroidism.
-
- THYROXINE (T4)
-
- This is a measurement of the total thyroxine in the serum,
- including both the physiologically active (free) form, and the
- inactive form bound to thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG). It is
- increased in hyperthyroidism and in euthyroid states
- characterized by increased TBG (See "T3 uptake," above, and
- "FTI," below). Occasionally, hyperthyroidism will not be
- manifested by elevation of T4 (free or total), but only by
- elevation of T3 (triiodothyronine). Therefore, if thyrotoxicosis
- is clinically suspect, and T4 and FTI are normal, the test
- "T3-RIA" is recommended (this is not the same test as "T3
- uptake," which has nothing to do with the amount of T3 in the
- patient's serum).
-
- T4 is decreased in hypothyroidism and in euthyroid states
- characterized by decreased TBG. A separate test for "free T4" is
- available, but it is not usually necessary for the diagnosis of
- functional thyroid disorders.
-
- FTI (T7)
-
- This is a convenient parameter with mathematically accounts for
- the reciprocal effects of T4 and T3 uptake to give a single
- figure which correlates with free T4. Therefore, increased FTI
- is seen in hyperthyroidism, and with decreased FTI is seen in
- hypothyroidism. Early cases of hyperthyroidism may be expressed
- only by decreased thyroid stimulation hormone (TSH) with normal
- FTI. Early cases of hypothyroidism may be expressed only by
- increased TSH with normal FTI.
-
- ASSESSMENT OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS RISK: Triglycerides, Cholesterol,
- HDL Cholesterol, LDL Cholesterol, Chol/HDL ratio
-
- All of these studies find greatest utility in assessing the risk of
- atherosclerosis in the patient. Increased risks based on lipid studies
- are independent of other risk factors, such as cigarette smoking.
-
- Total cholesterol has been found to correlate with total and
- cardiovascular mortality in the 30-50 year age group. Cardiovascular
- mortality increases 9% for each 10 mg/dL increase in total cholesterol
- over the baseline value of 180 mg/dL. Approximately 80% of the adult
- male population has values greater than this, so the use of the median
- 95% of the population to establish a normal range (as is traditional in
- lab medicine in general) has no utility for this test. Excess mortality
- has been shown not to correlate with cholesterol levels in the >50
- years age group, probably because of the depressive effects on
- cholesterol levels expressed by various chronic diseases to which older
- individuals are prone.
-
- HDL-cholesterol is "good" cholesterol, in that risk of cardiovascular
- disease decreases with increase of HDL. One way to assess risk is to
- use the total cholesterol/HDL-cholesterol ratio, with lower values
- indicating lower risk. The following chart has been developed from
- ideas advanced by Castelli and Levitas, Current Prescribing, June,
- 1977. It should be taken with a large grain of salt substitute:
-
- Total cholesterol (mg/dL)
- 150 185 200 210 220 225 244 260 300
- ------------------------------------------------------
- 25 | #### 1.34 1.50 1.60 1.80 2.00 3.00 4.00 6.00
- 30 | #### 1.22 1.37 1.46 1.64 1.82 2.73 3.64 5.46
- 35 | #### 1.00 1.12 1.19 1.34 1.49 2.24 2.98 4.47
- HDL-chol 40 | #### 0.82 0.92 0.98 1.10 1.22 1.83 2.44 3.66
- (mg/dL) 45 | #### 0.67 0.75 0.80 0.90 1.00 1.50 2.00 3.00
- 50 | #### 0.55 0.62 0.66 0.74 0.82 1.23 1.64 2.46
- 55 | #### 0.45 0.50 0.54 0.60 0.67 1.01 1.34 2.01
- 60 | #### 0.37 0.41 0.44 0.50 0.55 0.83 1.10 1.65
- 65 | #### 0.30 0.34 0.36 0.41 0.45 0.68 0.90 1.35
- over 70 | #### #### #### #### #### #### #### #### ####
-
- The numbers with two-decimal format represent the relative risk of
- atherosclerosis vis-a-vis the general population. Cells marked "####"
- indicate very low risk or undefined risk situations. Some authors have
- warned against putting too much emphasis on the total-chol/HDL-chol
- ratio at the expense of the total cholesterol level.
-
- Readers outside the US may find the following version of the table more
- useful. This uses SI units for total and HDL cholesterol:
-
- Total cholesterol (mmol/L)
- 3.9 4.8 5.2 5.4 5.7 5.8 6.3 6.7 7.8
- ------------------------------------------------------
- 0.65 | #### 1.34 1.50 1.60 1.80 2.00 3.00 4.00 6.00
- 0.78 | #### 1.22 1.37 1.46 1.64 1.82 2.73 3.64 5.46
- 0.91 | #### 1.00 1.12 1.19 1.34 1.49 2.24 2.98 4.47
- HDL-chol 1.04 | #### 0.82 0.92 0.98 1.10 1.22 1.83 2.44 3.66
- (mmol/L) 1.16 | #### 0.67 0.75 0.80 0.90 1.00 1.50 2.00 3.00
- 1.30 | #### 0.55 0.62 0.66 0.74 0.82 1.23 1.64 2.46
- 1.42 | #### 0.45 0.50 0.54 0.60 0.67 1.01 1.34 2.01
- 1.55 | #### 0.37 0.41 0.44 0.50 0.55 0.83 1.10 1.65
- 1.68 | #### 0.30 0.34 0.36 0.41 0.45 0.68 0.90 1.35
- over 1.81 | #### #### #### #### #### #### #### #### ####
-
- Triglyceride level is risk factor independent of the cholesterol
- levels. Triglycerides are important as risk factors only if they are
- not part of the chylomicron fraction. To make this determination in a
- hypertriglyceridemic patient, it is necessary to either perform
- lipoprotein electrophoresis or visually examine an overnight-
- refrigerated serum sample for the presence of a chylomicron layer. The
- use of lipoprotein electrophoresis for routine assessment of
- atherosclerosis risk is probably overkill in terms of expense to the
- patient.
-
- LDL-cholesterol (the amount of cholesterol associated with low-density,
- or beta, lipoprotein) is not an independently measured parameter but is
- mathematically derived from the parameters detailed above. Some risk-
- reduction programs use LDL-cholesterol as the primary target parameter
- for monitoring the success of the program.
-
- TRIGLYCERIDES
-
- Markedly increased triglycerides (>500 mg/dL) usually indicate
- a nonfasting patient (i.e., one having consumed any calories
- within 12-14 hour period prior to specimen collection). If
- patient is fasting, hypertriglyceridemia is seen in
- hyperlipoproteinemia types I, IIb, III, IV, and V. Exact
- classification theoretically requires lipoprotein
- electrophoresis, but this is not usually necessary to assess a
- patient's risk to atherosclerosis [See "Assessment of
- Atherosclerosis Risk," above]. Cholestyramine, corticosteroids,
- estrogens, ethanol, miconazole (intravenous), oral
- contraceptives, spironolactone, stress, and high carbohydrate
- intake are known to increase triglycerides. Decreased serum
- triglycerides are seen in abetalipoproteinemia, chronic
- obstructive pulmonary disease, hyperthyroidism, malnutrition,
- and malabsorption states.
-
- RBC (Red Blood Cell) COUNT
-
- The RBC count is most useful as raw data for calculation of the
- erythrocyte indices MCV and MCH [see below]. Decreased RBC is
- usually seen in anemia of any cause with the possible exception
- of thalassemia minor, where a mild or borderline anemia is seen
- with a high or borderline-high RBC. Increased RBC is seen in
- erythrocytotic states, whether absolute (polycythemia vera,
- erythrocytosis of chronic hypoxia) or relative (dehydration,
- stress polycthemia), and in thalassemia minor [see "Hemoglobin,"
- below, for discussion of anemias and erythrocytoses].
-
- HEMOGLOBIN, HEMATOCRIT, MCV (mean corpuscular volume), MCH
- (mean corpuscular hemoglobin), MCHC (mean corpuscular
- hemoglobin concentration)
-
- Strictly speaking, anemia is defined as a decrease in total body red
- cell mass. For practical purposes, however, anemia is typically defined
- as hemoglobin <12.0 g/dL and direct determination of total body RBC
- mass is almost never used to establish this diagnosis. Anemias are then
- classed by MCV and MCHC (MCH is usually not helpful) into one of the
- following categories:
-
- A. Microcytic/hypochromic anemia (decreased MCV, decreased
- MCHC)
- Iron deficiency (common)
- Thalassemia (common, except in people of Germanic,
- Slavonic, Baltic, Native American, Han Chinese,
- Japanese descent)
- Anemia of chronic disease (uncommonly microcytic)
- Sideroblastic anemia (uncommon; acquired forms more often
- macrocytic)
- Lead poisoning (uncommon)
- Hemoglobin E trait or disease (common in Thai, Khmer,
- Burmese,Malay, Vietnamese, and Bengali groups)
-
- B. Macrocytic/normochromic anemia (increased MCV, normal MCHC)
-
- Folate deficiency (common)
- B12 deficiency (common)
- Myelodysplastic syndromes (not uncommon, especially in
- older individuals)
- Hypothyroidism (rare)
-
- C. Normochromic/normocytic anemia (normal MCV, normal MCHC)
-
- The first step in laboratory workup of this broad class of
- anemias is a reticulocyte count. Elevated reticulocytes implies
- a normo-regenerative anemia, while a low or "normal" count
- implies a hyporegenerative anemia:
-
- 1. Normoregenerative normocytic anemias (appropriate
- reticulocyte response)
-
- Immunohemolytic anemia
- Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
- (common)
- Hemoglobin S or C
- Hereditary spherocytosis
- Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
- Paroxysmal hemoglobinuria
-
- 2. Hyporegenerative normocytic anemias (inadequate
- reticulocyte response)
-
- Anemia of chronic disease
- Anemia of chronic renal failure
- Aplastic anemia*
-
- *Drugs and other substances that have caused aplastic anemia include
- the following:
-
- amphotericin sulfonamides phenacetin trimethadione
- silver chlordiazepoxide tolbutamide thiouracil
- carbamazepine chloramphenicol tetracycline oxyphenbutazone
- arsenicals chlorpromazine pyrimethamine carbimazole
- acetazolamide colchicine penicillin aspirin
- mephenytoin bismuth promazine quinacrine
- methimazole chlorothiazide dinitrophenol ristocetin
- indomethacin phenytoin gold trifluoperazine
- carbutamide perchlorate chlorpheniramine streptomycin
- phenylbutazone primidone mercury meprobamate
- chlorpropamide thiocyanate tripelennamine benzene
-
- The drugs listed above produce marrow aplasia via an unpredictable,
- idiosyncratic host response in a small minority of patients. In
- addition, many antineoplastic drugs produce predictable, dose-related
- marrow suppression; these are not detailed here.
-
- POLYCYTHEMIA
-
- Polycythemia is defined as an increase in total body erythrocyte mass.
- As opposed to the situation with anemias, the physician may directly
- measure rbc mass using radiolabeling by 51chromium, so as to
- differentiate polycythemia (absolute erythrocytosis, as seen in
- polycythemia vera, chronic hypoxia, smoker's polycythemia, ectopic
- erythropoietin production, methemoglobinemia, and high O2 affinity
- hemoglobins) from relative erythrocytosis (as seen in stress
- polycythemia and dehydration). Further details of the work-up of
- polycythemias are beyond the scope of this monograph.
-
- RDW (Red cell Distribution Width)
-
- The red cell distribution width is a numerical expression which
- correlates with the degree of anisocytosis (variation in volume
- of the population of red cells). Some investigators feel that it
- is useful in differentiating thalassemia from iron deficiency
- anemia, but its use in this regard is far from universal
- acceptance. The RDW may also be useful in monitoring the results
- of hematinic therapy for iron-deficiency or megaloblastic
- anemias. As the patient's new, normally-sized cells are
- produced, the RDW initially increases, but then decreases as the
- normal cell population gains the majority.
-
- PLATELET COUNT
-
- Thrombocytosis is seen in many inflammatory disorders and
- myeloproliferative states, as well as in acute or chronic blood
- loss, hemolytic anemias, carcinomatosis, status
- post-splenectomy, post- exercise, etc.
-
- Thrombocytopenia is divided pathophysiologically into
- production defects and consumption defects based on examination
- of the bone marrow aspirate or biopsy for the presence of
- megakaryocytes. Production defects are seen in Wiskott-Aldritch
- syndrome, May-Hegglin anomaly, Bernard-Soulier syndrome,
- Chediak-Higashi anomaly, Fanconi's syndrome, aplastic anemia
- (see list of drugs, above), marrow replacement, megaloblastic
- and severe iron deficiency anemias, uremia, etc. Consumption
- defects are seen in autoimmune thrombocytopenias (including ITP
- and systemic lupus), DIC, TTP, congenital hemangiomas,
- hypersplenism, following massive hemorrhage, and in many severe
- infections.
-
- WBC (White Blood Cell) COUNT
-
- The WBC is really a nonparameter, since it simply represents the
- sum of the counts of granulocytes, lymphocytes, and monocytes
- per unit volume of whole blood. Automated counters do not
- distinguish bands from segs; however, it has been shown that if
- all other hematologic parameters are within normal limits, such
- a distinction is rarely important. Also, even in the best hands,
- trying to reliably distinguish bands from segs under the
- microscope is fraught with reproducibility problems. Discussion
- concerning a patient's band count probably carries no more
- scientific weight than a medieval theological argument.
-
- GRANULOCYTES
-
- Granulocytes include neutrophils (bands and segs), eosinophils,
- and basophils. In evaluating numerical aberrations of these
- cells (and of any other leukocytes), one should first determine
- the absolute count by multiplying the per cent value by the
- total WBC count. For instance, 2% basophils in a WBC of 6,000/uL
- gives 120 basophils, which is normal. However, 2% basophils in a
- WBC of 75,000/uL gives 1500 basophils/uL, which is grossly
- abnormal and establishes the diagnosis of chronic myelogenous
- leukemia over that of leukemoid reaction with fairly good
- accuracy.
-
- NEUTROPHILS
-
- Neutrophilia is seen in any acute insult to the body,
- whether infectious or not. Marked neutrophilia
- (>25,000/uL) brings up the problem of hematologic
- malignancy (leukemia, myelofibrosis) versus reactive
- leukocytosis, including "leukemoid reactions." Laboratory
- work-up of this problem may include expert review of the
- peripheral smear, leukocyte alkaline phosphatase, and
- cytogenetic analysis of peripheral blood or marrow
- granulocytes. Without cytogenetic analysis, bone marrrow
- aspiration and biopsy is of limited value and will not by
- itself establish the diagnosis of chronic myelocytic
- leukemia versus leukemoid reaction.
-
- Smokers tend to have higher granulocyte counts than
- nonsmokers. The usual increment in total wbc count is
- 1000/uL for each pack per day smoked.
-
- Repeated excess of "bands" in a differential count of a
- healthy patient should alert the physician to the
- possibility of Pelger-Huet anomaly, the diagnosis of
- which can be established by expert review of the
- peripheral smear. The manual band count is so poorly
- reproducible among observers that it is widely considered
- a worthless test. A more reproducible hematologic
- criterion for acute phase reaction is the presence in the
- smear of any younger forms of the neutrophilic line
- (metamyelocyte or younger).
-
- Neutropenia may be paradoxically seen in certain
- infections, including typhoid fever, brucellosis, viral
- illnesses, rickettsioses, and malaria. Other causes
- include aplastic anemia (see list of drugs above),
- aleukemic acute leukemias, thyroid disorders,
- hypopitituitarism, cirrhosis, and Chediak-Higashi
- syndrome.
-
- EOSINOPHILS
-
- Eosinophilia is seen in allergic disorders and invasive
- parasitoses. Other causes include pemphigus, dermatitis
- herpetiformis, scarlet fever, acute rheumatic fever,
- various myeloproliferative neoplasms, irradiation,
- polyarteritis nodosa, rheumatoid arthritis, sarcoidosis,
- smoking, tuberculosis, coccidioidomycosis,
- idiopathicallly as an inherited trait, and in the
- resolution phase of many acute infections.
-
- Eosinopenia is seen in the early phase of acute
- insults, such as shock, major pyogenic infections,
- trauma, surgery, etc. Drugs producing eosinopenia include
- corticosteroids, epinephrine, methysergide, niacin,
- niacinamide, and procainamide.
-
- BASOPHILS
-
- Basophilia, if absolute (see above) and of marked degree
- is a great clue to the presence of myeloproliferative
- disease as opposed to leukemoid reaction. Other causes of
- basophilia include allergic reactions, chickenpox,
- ulcerative colitis, myxedema, chronic hemolytic anemias,
- Hodgkin's disease, and status post-splenectomy.
- Estrogens, antithyroid drugs, and desipramine may also
- increase basophils.
-
- Basopenia is not generally a clinical problem.
-
- LYMPHOCYTES
-
- Lymphocytosis is seen in infectious mononucleosis, viral
- hepatitis, cytomegalovirus infection, other viral infections,
- pertussis, toxoplasmosis, brucellosis, TB, syphilis, lymphocytic
- leukemias, and lead, carbon disulfide, tetrachloroethane, and
- arsenical poisonings. A mature lymphocyte count >7,000/uL is an
- individual over 50 years of age is highly suggestive of chronic
- lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Drugs increasing the lymphocyte
- count include aminosalicyclic acid, griseofulvin, haloperidol,
- levodopa, niacinamide, phenytoin, and mephenytoin.
-
- Lymphopenia is characteristic of AIDS. It is also seen in
- acute infections, Hodgkin's disease, systemic lupus, renal
- failure, carcinomatosis, and with administration of
- corticosteroids, lithium, mechlorethamine, methysergide, niacin,
- and ionizing irradiation. Of all hematopoietic cells lymphocytes
- are the most sensitive to whole-body irradiation, and their
- count is the first to fall in radiation sickness.
-
- MONOCYTES
-
- Monocytosis is seen in the recovery phase of many acute
- infections. It is also seen in diseases characterized by chronic
- granulomatous inflammation (TB, syphilis, brucellosis, Crohn's
- disease, and sarcoidosis), ulcerative colitis, systemic lupus,
- rheumatoid arthritis, polyarteritis nodosa, and many hematologic
- neoplasms. Poisoning by carbon disulfide, phosphorus, and
- tetrachloroethane, as well as administration of griseofulvin,
- haloperidol, and methsuximide, may cause monocytosis.
-
- Monocytopenia is generally not a clinical problem.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- Tietz, Norbert W., Clinical Guide to Laboratory Tests,
- Saunders, 1983.
- Friedman, RB, et al., Effects of Diseases on Clinical
- Laboratory Tests, American Association of Clinical Chemistry,
- 1980
- Anderson, KM, et al., Cholesterol and Mortality, JAMA 257:
- 2176¡2180, 1987
-
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
-
- Many thanks to Michael Gayler, FIBMS, DMS, CertHSm (MLSO2, Department
- of Chemical Pathology, Leicester Royal Infirmary)
- <gaylers@zetnet.co.uk> for the excellent review and comments, and for
- the labor of translating American to SI units.
-
- NOTE
-
- Please send all constructive comments regarding this FAQ to Ed Uthman,
- MD <uthman@neosoft.com>. I am especially interested in correcting any
- errors of commission or omission.
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- This article is provided "as is" without any express or implied
- warranties. While reasonable effort has been made to ensure the
- accuracy of the information, the author assumes no responsibility for
- errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from use of the
- information herein.
-
-
- Copyright (c) 1994-97, Edward O. Uthman. This material may be reformatted
- and/or freely distributed via online services or other media, as long as
- it is not substantively altered. Authors, educators, and others are
- welcome to use any ideas presented herein, but I would ask for
- acknowledgment in any published work derived therefrom. Commercial use
- is not allowed without the prior written consent of the author.
-
- version 2.1, 9/10/97
-