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How to Read Your Lab Results: A Patient's Guide to Understanding Blood Tests

Your lab report is full of abbreviations, numbers, and flags. What do they all mean? Learn to interpret common blood tests, understand reference ranges, and know when to ask questions.

W
WellAlly Content Team
2026-04-11
10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Reference ranges vary by lab, age, sex, and population
  • Abnormal values require clinical correlation, not automatic concern
  • Trends over time matter more than single values
  • Some 'abnormal' results are normal for you
  • Ask your doctor about any concerning results

Key Takeaways

  • Reference ranges vary by lab, age, sex, and population
  • Abnormal values require clinical correlation, not automatic concern
  • Trends over time matter more than single values
  • Some 'abnormal' results are normal for you (your baseline)
  • Ask your doctor about any concerning or confusing results

Your lab report arrives. Columns of numbers, abbreviations, flagged highs and lows.

What does it all mean? Should you worry about that slightly elevated result? Is that flagged low value dangerous?

Understanding Your Lab Report

Basic Structure

Most lab reports include:

SectionWhat It Shows
Patient informationName, DOB, collection date
Test nameWhat was measured
Your resultYour actual value
Reference range"Normal" values
FlaggingAbnormal values marked (H, L, A)
UnitsHow measured (mg/dL, U/L, etc.)

Reference Ranges Explained

Reference range: Values expected for 95% of healthy people

Key point: "Normal" doesn't mean "everyone":

  • 2.5% of healthy people will have "abnormal" high results
  • 2.5% of healthy people will have "abnormal" low results
  • Your "normal" might be outside the reference range

Reference ranges vary by:

  • Laboratory: Different labs use different ranges
  • Equipment: Different analyzers produce different values
  • Population: Ranges based on who was tested
  • Age and sex: Many ranges differ by age and sex

According to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry, always use the reference range provided by the lab that performed your test.

CBC: Complete Blood Count

What It Measures

ComponentWhat It IsTypical Reference Range
WBCWhite blood cells4.5-11.0 x 10³/µL
RBCRed blood cells4.5-5.5 x 10⁶/µL (women)
4.3-5.9 x 10⁶/µL (men)
HemoglobinOxygen-carrying protein12-15 g/dL (women)
13.5-17.5 g/dL (men)
HematocritPercentage of blood that's RBCs36-48% (women)
41-53% (men)
PlateletsClotting cells150-450 x 10³/µL

Common Abnormalities

Low hemoglobin/hematocrit: Anemia

  • Mild: Slightly below range
  • Moderate: Significantly below range
  • Severe: Markedly below range, may need transfusion

High WBC: Infection, inflammation, stress, leukemia Low WBC: Viral infection, bone marrow problem, medication side effect

Abnormal platelets:

  • Low: Bleeding risk, medication effect, autoimmune
  • High: Inflammation, iron deficiency, essential thrombocythemia

Metabolic Panel

CMP: Comprehensive Metabolic Panel

Glucose:

  • Normal: <100 mg/dL (fasting)
  • Prediabetes: 100-125 mg/dL
  • Diabetes: ≥126 mg/dL (fasting)

Electrolytes:

  • Sodium (135-145 mmol/L)
  • Potassium (3.5-5.0 mmol/L)
  • Chloride (98-107 mmol/L)
  • CO₂ (21-32 mmol/L)

Kidney function:

  • BUN (7-20 mg/dL)
  • Creatinine (0.6-1.2 mg/dL, varies)
  • eGFR (>90 ml/min/1.73m²)

Liver function:

  • ALT (7-56 U/L)
  • AST (10-40 U/L)
  • Alkaline phosphatase (45-117 U/L)
  • Bilirubin (<1.2 mg/dL)

Lipid Panel

Cholesterol Values

ComponentOptimalHigh Risk
Total cholesterol<200 mg/dL≥240 mg/dL
LDL<100 mg/dL≥160 mg/dL
HDL≥60 mg/dL (protective)<40 mg/dL (risk)
Triglycerides<150 mg/dL≥200 mg/dL

Ratio: Total/HDL is less useful than individual values.

Thyroid Tests

Thyroid Function Tests

TestWhat It MeasuresNormal Range
TSHThyroid stimulating hormone0.4-4.0 mIU/L
Free T4Active thyroid hormone0.8-1.8 ng/dL
Free T3Active thyroid hormone2.3-4.2 pg/mL

Patterns:

  • High TSH + low T4: Hypothyroidism
  • Low TSH + high T4: Hyperthyroidism
  • Abnormal TSH with normal T4: Subclinical disease

Inflammatory Markers

CRP and ESR

TestNormalElevated
CRP<3 mg/L>3 mg/L
ESR<20 mm/hr (women)>20 mm/hr
<15 mm/hr (men under 50)>15 mm/hr

Context matters: Infection, autoimmune disease, cancer, tissue injury

Interpreting Your Results

When to Be Concerned

Red flags:

  • Markedly abnormal: Far outside reference range
  • Dangerously abnormal: Values requiring immediate attention
    • Potassium <2.5 or >6.5 mmol/L
    • Sodium <120 or >160 mmol/L
    • Hemoglobin <7 or >20 g/dL
    • Platelets <10 or >1000 x 10³/µL
    • Troponin elevated (heart attack marker)

Yellow flags:

  • Mildly abnormal: Slightly outside range
  • Persistently abnormal: Same abnormality over multiple tests
  • Unexpected abnormality: No clear explanation

Green flags:

  • Within reference range: Generally reassuring
  • Stable over time: Consistent values
  • Expected abnormalities: Known baseline (e.g., stable low hemoglobin)

Questions to Ask Your Doctor

For any abnormal result:

  1. What does this value mean in my case?
  2. Is this significant or minor?
  3. What's the likely cause?
  4. Do I need additional testing?
  5. Do I need treatment?
  6. When should we recheck?

For normal results with ongoing symptoms:

  1. If labs are normal, what else could explain my symptoms?
  2. Do I need additional testing?
  3. Should we repeat testing?

Tracking Your Results

Why Trends Matter

Single lab value: Snapshot in time Trend over time: More meaningful

Examples:

  • Gradually rising creatinine: Declining kidney function
  • Gradually rising ALT: Liver injury progression
  • Hemoglobin dropping from 14 → 13 → 12: Developing anemia
  • Cholesterol improving: Lifestyle changes working

According to UpToDate, trends often more clinically meaningful than single values.

Keeping Records

Maintain personal health record:

  • Dates of all lab tests
  • Results (not just "normal" vs "abnormal")
  • Trends over time
  • Responses to treatment

Apps and patient portals make tracking easier.

Common Mistakes

What NOT to Do

❌ Don't panic over mildly abnormal results

  • Slight variations are normal
  • Clinical context essential

❌ Don't diagnose yourself from Dr. Google

  • Information online often incomplete or wrong
  • Lab results don't equal diagnosis

❌ Don't compare with others

  • "Normal" varies individually
  • Different labs, different ranges

❌ Don't ignore flagged results

  • Abnormal values need attention
  • Call your doctor if unsure

❌ Don't treat based on labs alone

  • Treat the patient, not the lab value
  • Clinical correlation essential

Frequently Asked Questions

Are lab result apps accurate?

Some apps provide general information about lab tests. However, they cannot interpret your results in clinical context. Always discuss results with your healthcare provider.

Why did my lab results change from last time?

Normal variation, different lab, different equipment, or actual change in health. Minor fluctuations are normal. Consistent changes or large changes warrant discussion.

Can I have abnormal labs and still be healthy?

Yes. "Normal" ranges include 95% of healthy people, meaning 5% of healthy people have "abnormal" results. Some people have baseline abnormalities that are normal for them.

Do I need to fast for all lab tests?

No. Glucose, lipids, and some metabolic tests require fasting. Most others (CBC, thyroid, kidney function) do not. Always confirm fasting requirements before testing.

What if the lab doesn't provide reference ranges?

Ask for them. Reference ranges are essential for interpreting your results. Different labs use different ranges, so always use the range from the lab that performed your test.

The Bottom Line

Lab results are tools, not diagnoses.

What they provide:

  • Objective measurements of your health
  • Baseline values for comparison
  • Trend information over time
  • Screening for disease

What they cannot provide:

  • Diagnosis without clinical correlation
  • Context about your symptoms
  • Understanding of your baseline
  • Treatment recommendations alone

Best approach:

  1. Review results with your healthcare provider
  2. Ask questions about abnormal values
  3. Track trends over time
  4. Understand your baseline (what's normal for you)
  5. Don't panic over mildly abnormal results
  6. Do follow up as recommended

Your lab results are part of your health picture, not the whole picture. Combine them with your symptoms, physical exam, and medical history for complete understanding.


Sources:

  • American Association for Clinical Chemistry - "Lab Tests Online"
  • American Family Physician - "Interpreting Laboratory Results"
  • UpToDate - "Understanding Lab Test Interpretation"
  • Journal of the American Medical Association - "Reference Ranges and Clinical Decision Making"

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment.

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Article Tags

Lab Results
Blood Test
Patient Guide
Reference Ranges
Medical Testing

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