Here is the full analysis of Asif's lab report from Rahila Medical Lab (dated 01-Jul-2026):
Patient: ASIF | 34 Years, Male
🔴 ABNORMAL RESULTS (Flagged)
Liver Function Tests
| Test | Result | Normal Range | Status |
|---|
| Bilirubin Total | 0.82 mg/dl | 0.2 - 1.1 | ✅ Normal |
| SGPT (ALT) | 64 U/L | 5 - 42 | 🔴 HIGH |
| SGOT (AST) | 52 U/L | 5 - 40 | 🔴 HIGH |
| Alkaline Phosphatase | 254 U/L | 65 - 306 | ✅ Normal |
Interpretation: Both liver enzymes (ALT and AST) are elevated. ALT is ~52% above the upper limit, and AST is ~30% above. This suggests active liver inflammation (hepatitis). The elevation is mild-to-moderate, not severe. Possible causes include viral hepatitis, H. pylori-related systemic inflammation, typhoid, fatty liver, or medication effects.
Serology Report
| Test | Result | Interpretation |
|---|
| Typhidot IgG | Negative | No past typhoid infection |
| H. Pylori | Positive | 🔴 Active H. Pylori infection |
| Typhidot IgM | Negative | No acute typhoid |
Interpretation: H. Pylori is positive - this is a bacterial stomach infection. It commonly causes gastritis, peptic ulcers, and stomach pain. It requires a specific antibiotic regimen (triple or quadruple therapy). Typhoid is ruled out (both IgG and IgM negative).
Haematology (Blood Complete Count)
| Test | Result | Normal Range | Status |
|---|
| Haemoglobin | 13.1 g/dl | 13 - 18 | ✅ Low-normal (borderline) |
| WBC (TLC) | 10.4 x10³/uL | 4 - 11 | ✅ Normal (upper limit) |
| ESR | 46 mm/hr | 1 - 10 | 🔴 HIGH |
| Total RBC | 4.8 x10⁶/uL | 4.5 - 6.5 | ✅ Normal |
| HCT (PVC) | 38.8% | 38 - 52 | ✅ Low-normal |
| MCV | 95.2 fL | 80 - 96 | ✅ Normal |
| MCH | 25.3 pg | 27 - 32 | 🔴 LOW |
| MCHC | 33.1% | 30 - 35 | ✅ Normal |
| Platelets | 366 x10³/uL | 150 - 450 | ✅ Normal |
ESR is significantly elevated (46 vs normal 1-10). This is a non-specific but important marker of active inflammation or infection in the body - consistent with H. Pylori infection and elevated liver enzymes.
MCH is low (25.3 vs 27-32), suggesting red blood cells are carrying less hemoglobin than normal. Combined with borderline-low hemoglobin, this points toward early iron-deficiency or nutritional deficiency.
Differential Leucocyte Count
| Test | Result | Normal | Status |
|---|
| Neutrophils | 61% | 40 - 75 | ✅ Normal |
| Lymphocytes | 35% | 20 - 45 | ✅ Normal |
| Monocytes | 3% | 2 - 10 | ✅ Normal |
| Eosinophils | 1% | 1 - 6 | ✅ Normal |
| Basophils | 0% | < 1 | ✅ Normal |
Blood Glucose & Malaria
| Test | Result | Status |
|---|
| Glucose Random | 100 mg/dl | ✅ Normal (< 160) |
| Malarial Parasite | Negative | ✅ Clear |
Summary & Key Concerns
-
H. Pylori Positive - The most actionable finding. Requires treatment with a doctor-prescribed antibiotic regimen (typically 10-14 days). Left untreated, it can lead to ulcers and gastric complications.
-
Elevated Liver Enzymes (ALT/AST) - Mild hepatitis picture. The H. Pylori infection itself may partially contribute, but further workup (Hepatitis B/C serology, ultrasound abdomen) may be advisable.
-
High ESR - Confirms an ongoing inflammatory or infective process in the body. Should normalise once the underlying cause is treated.
-
Low MCH with borderline Hb - Mild hypochromic picture. Iron studies (serum ferritin, serum iron) may help clarify if iron deficiency is present.
Important: This analysis is for informational purposes only. Please consult a qualified physician - ideally a gastroenterologist or general physician - who can correlate these findings with Asif's symptoms, prescribe H. Pylori treatment, and decide whether further tests (hepatitis panel, liver ultrasound, iron studies) are needed.