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Here is a page-by-page summary of Mr. Gaurav Poojari's lab report (21-year-old male, collected March 30, 2026):

Page 1 — CBC: RBC & WBC Parameters Red cell indices show hemoglobin at 13 g/dL (low-normal), RBC count slightly high at 5.7, MCV low at 71.4 fL, MCH low at 22.6 pg, and RDW-CV elevated at 17.5% — a pattern suggestive of microcytic anemia (possibly iron deficiency). WBC count is normal at 6.4, with a normal differential (neutrophils 50%, lymphocytes 40%). Platelets are normal at 287.
Page 2 — CBC: Platelet Parameters & Interpretation Platelet indices (MPV, PCT, PDW, P-LCR, P-LCC) are all within normal range. Mentzer Index is 12.53 (>13 favors iron deficiency anemia; borderline here). Interpretation note explains CBC's diagnostic role.
Page 3 — ESR (Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate) ESR is 7 mm/hr, which is normal (reference: 0–10). No evidence of significant systemic inflammation.
Page 4 — HbA1c (Glycosylated Hemoglobin) HbA1c is 5%, well within the non-diabetic range (<5.7%). Estimated average glucose is 96.8 mg/dL. No indication of diabetes or prediabetes.
Page 5 — Blood Sugar Fasting Fasting glucose is 76 mg/dL, which is normal (70–100 mg/dL). No evidence of impaired fasting glucose or diabetes.
Page 6 — Liver Function Test (LFT) All liver parameters are within normal limits: bilirubin, AST (21 U/L), ALT (14 U/L), ALP (60 U/L), total protein (7.3 g/dL), albumin (4.5 g/dL), globulin (2.8 g/dL), A:G ratio (1.61), and GGT (15 U/L). Liver function appears healthy.
Page 7 — Kidney Function Test (KFT) Blood urea (18) and BUN (8.41) are slightly below range — likely due to low protein intake or good hydration rather than pathology. Creatinine is normal at 0.9 mg/dL. eGFR is excellent at 124.47 ml/min/1.73m². Uric acid, calcium, phosphorus, sodium, potassium, and chloride are all normal. Kidney function is normal.
Page 8 — Lipid Profile Total cholesterol 153 (optimal), triglycerides 52 (optimal), HDL 65 (slightly above the 40–60 range — favorable), LDL 77.6 (optimal), VLDL 10.4 (normal), Non-HDL 88 (optimal). Chol/HDL and LDL/HDL ratios are flagged as low but this reflects a favorable lipid profile, not a concern.
Page 9 — ASCVD Risk Stratification Continuation of the lipid report. Provides the Lipid Association of India's ASCVD risk classification table and statin initiation thresholds. At 21 years with no major risk factors and optimal lipid levels, this patient falls in the low-risk category.
Page 10 — Blank/Header Page Contains only the patient identification header with no test results. Likely a formatting/continuation page.
Page 11 — Vitamin B12 Vitamin B12 is 374 pg/mL, within the normal range (187–883). No deficiency detected.
Page 12 — Vitamin D (25-Hydroxy) Vitamin D is 11 ng/mL, flagged as insufficient (reference: insufficient = 10–30 ng/mL; sufficient = >30 ng/mL). This is a common finding and warrants supplementation.
Page 13 — Thyroid Profile (T3, T4, TSH) T3 is 92 ng/dL (normal), T4 is 6.1 µg/dL (normal), TSH is 2.46 µIU/mL (normal, range 0.35–4.94). Thyroid function is normal — no hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism.
Page 14 — PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen) PSA-Total is 0.2 ng/mL, well within normal range (0–4 ng/mL). No concern for prostate pathology.
Page 15 — eGFR (Standalone) Repeat/dedicated eGFR page: creatinine 0.9 mg/dL, eGFR 124.47 ml/min/1.73m² — categorized as "Normal or High (≥90)." Kidney filtration function is excellent.
Page 16 — Urine Routine & Microscopy Physical exam: pale yellow, clear urine. Chemical exam: pH 6.5, specific gravity 1.025, glucose negative, ketones negative, blood negative — however urine protein shows a TRACE (should be negative). Microscopy: pus cells 2–4/hpf (normal), no RBCs, bacteria, or casts. The trace protein is a mild finding to monitor.
Page 17 — Urinalysis Interpretation & End of Report Provides reference explanations for each urine parameter. Notes that pending reports remain for Stool R/M, Blood Group, and Post-Prandial Blood Sugar (Glu-PP).
Page 18 — Terms and Conditions Standard laboratory disclaimer: results are for physician interpretation only, not valid for medico-legal use, and patient is responsible for disclosing factors (diet, medications, fasting status) that may affect results.

Key Abnormal Findings at a Glance:
FindingValueStatus
MCV71.4 fLLow
MCH22.6 pgLow
RDW-CV17.5%High
Vitamin D11 ng/mLInsufficient
Urine ProteinTraceBorderline
Blood Urea / BUNSlightly lowLikely benign
The most clinically significant findings are the microcytic red cell indices (suggesting possible iron deficiency anemia) and Vitamin D insufficiency, both warranting follow-up with the treating physician.
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