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What is the diagnosis

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Reading File
Based on both reports, I can now provide a clear clinical interpretation.

Patient: Mrs. Mamoni Khatun, 30-year-old Female | Date: 08/07/2026


Report 1 - CBC Findings

ParameterResultReference RangeInterpretation
Haemoglobin10.5 g/dL12-15LOW
Total WBC12,700 cells/cumm4000-11000HIGH
Platelets1.0 lakhs/cumm1.5-4.1LOW
ESR36 mm/hrUp to 12HIGH
PCV/HCT31.6%36-46LOW
MCV82.0 fL83-101Borderline low
MCH27.2 pg27-32Normal
MCHC33.2%31.5-34.5Normal

Report 2 - USG of Pregnancy (from visual inspection of image 2)

  • Single live intrauterine fetus, cephalic presentation
  • FHR: 123 bpm (normal)
  • Gestational Age (USG): 36 weeks 2 days
  • EDD (USG): 03/08/2026
  • EFW: 2654 gm ± 409 gm
  • Amniotic fluid adequate (largest pocket 7.9 cm)
  • Placenta: Fundoposterior, Grade II maturity
  • No cord around neck

Diagnosis

1. Anemia in Pregnancy - Moderate degree

  • Hb of 10.5 g/dL at 36 weeks gestation is below the normal range for pregnancy (>11 g/dL per WHO)
  • MCV is borderline low (82 fL), and HCT is reduced (31.6%), suggesting a normocytic to mild microcytic pattern - likely iron deficiency anemia or anemia of pregnancy
  • This is the primary and most clinically significant finding

2. Thrombocytopenia

  • Platelets at 1.0 lakh/cumm (100,000/µL) - below normal range
  • In the context of late pregnancy (36 weeks), this raises concern for:
    • Gestational thrombocytopenia (most common, benign)
    • Pre-eclampsia / HELLP syndrome - must be actively ruled out (check BP, liver enzymes, urine protein)
    • Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)

3. Leukocytosis

  • WBC of 12,700 is mildly elevated; mild leukocytosis is physiologically normal in pregnancy (up to ~14,000), but combined with elevated ESR (36 mm/hr), an underlying infection or inflammatory process should be considered

4. Near-term Pregnancy (36 weeks 2 days)

  • Fetus is well, cephalic, adequate liquor - reassuring USG

Key Clinical Recommendations

⚠️ This is not a substitute for medical advice from a qualified doctor. The treating physician should evaluate this patient in person.
  1. Check blood pressure - to rule out pre-eclampsia given the thrombocytopenia
  2. Urine protein - rule out proteinuria (pre-eclampsia/HELLP)
  3. Liver function tests (LFTs) and LDH - to rule out HELLP syndrome
  4. Peripheral blood smear - to assess red cell morphology and platelet morphology
  5. Iron studies (serum ferritin, TIBC) - to confirm iron deficiency anemia
  6. Iron supplementation if confirmed iron deficiency
  7. Close monitoring as delivery is expected within 2 weeks
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