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I've read the full report. Here is a clear, organized breakdown for Raushan Kumar, Male, 21 years (collected 13 June 2026):

⚠️ Report Summary: Multiple Abnormal Findings

This report is NOT normal. There are several significant abnormalities that require immediate medical attention.

🔴 CRITICAL - Malaria Detected

FindingResultStatus
Malaria ParasitePlasmodium vivax detected🔴 CRITICAL
Parasitemia Index1.6% (Ring & Trophozoite forms seen)🔴 CRITICAL
The lab itself has flagged this as a Critical Result and advises consulting a doctor immediately. Plasmodium vivax malaria requires prompt treatment with antimalarials (typically chloroquine + primaquine).

🔴 Abnormal CBC (Blood Count) Values

TestResultNormal RangeStatus
RBC4.094.5 - 5.5🔴 Low
HCT (Hematocrit)38.8%40 - 50%🔴 Low
MCH33.2 pg27 - 32 pg🟡 Slightly High
MCHC35.0 g/dL31.5 - 34.5 g/dL🟡 Slightly High
Lymphocytes50%20 - 40%🔴 High (Lymphocytosis)
Absolute Lymphocyte Count3.481 - 3🔴 High
Platelet Count100150 - 410🔴 Low (Thrombocytopenia)
Absolute Basophil Count00.02 - 0.1🟡 Low
Key concern: Platelet count of 100 (10³/µL) is significantly low. This is a classic finding in malaria (especially P. vivax) and can increase bleeding risk. The lab confirmed this on smear and recommends a repeat test.
The low RBC and hematocrit suggest mild anemia, also consistent with malaria causing RBC destruction.

🟡 Pre-Diabetic Fasting Blood Sugar

TestResultNormal RangeStatus
Fasting Glucose108 mg/dL70 - 99 mg/dL🟡 Pre-Diabetic range
A fasting glucose of 108 falls in the pre-diabetes (IGT) range (100-125 mg/dL). This should be monitored and ideally retested once the acute illness (malaria) is resolved, as infection/fever can temporarily elevate blood sugar.

✅ Normal Values

TestResultStatus
Hemoglobin13.6 g/dL✅ Normal
Total WBC Count6.95✅ Normal
Neutrophils40%✅ Normal (low-normal)
SGPT (Liver enzyme)36 U/L✅ Normal
Typhoid IgM (Typhidot)Negative✅ Normal

What Should Be Done Right Away

  1. See a doctor immediately - the malaria finding alone is a medical emergency requiring same-day treatment.
  2. Antimalarial treatment for P. vivax typically involves chloroquine (to clear the blood-stage parasite) and primaquine (to prevent relapse from liver-stage parasites) - but the treating doctor will decide based on clinical assessment.
  3. Platelet count needs to be monitored closely during treatment.
  4. Once recovered, recheck fasting blood sugar to properly evaluate the pre-diabetes finding (illness can transiently raise glucose).
  5. The low RBC/hematocrit (mild anemia) will likely improve once malaria is treated.
Disclaimer: This is an analysis of the lab report only. It is not a substitute for a doctor's clinical evaluation and prescription. Please consult a physician urgently.
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