Read this medical report and tell me is it normal or not ?

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Here is a full breakdown of Raushan Kumar's (21-year-old male) medical report from June 13, 2026. This report is NOT normal - there are several abnormal findings that require immediate medical attention.

Report Summary

🚨 CRITICAL FINDING - Seek Medical Care Immediately

Malaria (Plasmodium vivax) - POSITIVE
  • Ring and trophozoite forms of Plasmodium vivax detected on blood smear
  • Parasite index: 1.6% (parasitemia)
  • The lab itself flagged this as a "Critical Result" and advises consulting a doctor immediately
  • This is an active malaria infection and needs prompt treatment with antimalarials (typically chloroquine for P. vivax)

Abnormal Results

TestResultReference RangeStatus
Platelet Count100 Γ— 10Β³/Β΅L150 - 410πŸ”΄ LOW
RBC4.09 Γ— 10⁢/cu.mm4.5 - 5.5🟑 Low
HCT (Hematocrit)38.8%40 - 50%🟑 Low
MCH33.2 pg27 - 32🟑 Slightly High
MCHC35.0 g/dL31.5 - 34.5🟑 Slightly High
Lymphocytes50%20 - 40%🟑 High
Absolute Lymphocyte Count3.48 Γ— 10Β³/Β΅L1 - 3🟑 High
Absolute Basophil Count00.02 - 0.1🟑 Low
Fasting Blood Sugar108 mg/dL70 - 99🟑 Pre-diabetic range

Normal Results

TestResultReference RangeStatus
Hemoglobin13.6 g/dL13.0 - 17.0βœ… Normal
WBC (Total Leucocyte Count)6.95 Γ— 10Β³/Β΅L4 - 10βœ… Normal
Neutrophils40%40 - 80%βœ… Normal
SGPT (Liver enzyme)36 U/L10 - 49βœ… Normal
Typhoid IgM (Typhidot)NegativeNegativeβœ… Normal
MCV95.0 fL83 - 101βœ… Normal
RDW-CV13.5%11.5 - 14βœ… Normal

What the Abnormalities Mean

  1. Malaria (P. vivax) - Active infection. This is directly causing most of the other abnormalities below.
  2. Low Platelets (100K) - Thrombocytopenia is a classic and expected finding in malaria. The lab rechecked and confirmed on smear. Needs monitoring as it can drop further.
  3. Low RBC / Low Hematocrit - Mild anemia, also typical in malaria as the parasite destroys red blood cells.
  4. Lymphocytosis (50%) - Elevated lymphocytes, a typical immune response to a viral/parasitic infection.
  5. Fasting Blood Sugar 108 mg/dL - Falls in the pre-diabetic (impaired fasting glucose) range (100-125). This is unrelated to malaria and warrants follow-up with a repeat fasting glucose or HbA1c test after recovery.

What to Do

  • Go to a doctor or hospital immediately - active malaria requires prescription treatment
  • The low platelet count should be monitored closely during malaria treatment
  • After full recovery from malaria, repeat the fasting blood sugar test to confirm or rule out pre-diabetes
  • Liver function (SGPT) is currently normal, which is a good sign
⚠️ This analysis is for informational purposes only. Please consult a qualified physician for diagnosis and treatment. Do not self-medicate.
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