This information will be found on this blog health issue, blood test, health disease
Monday, January 9, 2023
Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR TEST)
What is this test?
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is a blood test. It measures how quickly erythrocytes, or red blood cells, separate from a blood sample that has been treated so the blood will not clot. During this test, a small amount of your blood will be put in an upright tube. A lab specialist will measure the rate that your red blood cells settle toward the bottom of the tube after 1 hour.
If you have a condition that causes inflammation or cell damage, your red blood cells tend to clump together. This makes them heavier, so they settle faster. The faster your red blood cells settle and fall, the higher your ESR. A high ESR tells your healthcare provider that you may have an active disease process in your body.
Why do I need this test?
You may need this test if you have symptoms of one of the diseases that may cause ESR to go up.
You may also need this test if you have already been diagnosed with a disease that causes a high ESR. The test can allow your healthcare provider to see how well you are responding to treatment.
The ESR blood test is most useful for diagnosing or monitoring diseases that cause pain and swelling from inflammation. Other symptoms may include fever and weight loss. These diseases include:
• Temporal arteritis
• Rheumatoid arthritis
• Polymyalgia rheumatica
ESR is not used as a screening test in people who do not have symptoms or to diagnose disease because many conditions can cause it to increase. It might also go up in many normal cases. ESR doesn't tell your healthcare provider whether you have a specific disease. It only suggests that you may have an active disease process in your body.
What do my test results mean?
Test results may vary depending on your age, gender, health history, and other things. Your test results may be different depending on the lab used. They may not mean you have a problem. Ask your healthcare provider what your test results mean for you.
ESR is measured in millimeters per hour (mm/hr). The normal values are:
• 0 to 15 mm/hr in men
• 0 to 20 mm/hr in women
ESR above 100 mm/h is most likely caused by an active disease. For instance, you may have:
• A disease that causes inflammation in your body
• An active infection
• Cancer
• Heart disease
• Kidney disease
• Blood disease
• Diabetes
• Collagen vascular disease
What might affect my test results?
Many things that are not active diseases can increase your ESR. These include:
• Pregnancy
• Old age
• Being female
• Having a menstrual period
• Having recently eaten a fatty meal
• Being obese
• Taking certain medicines
Sunday, January 8, 2023
Sudden Cardiac Arrest
WHAT IS A LIPID PANEL TEST
Tuesday, June 22, 2021
What is a procalcitonin test?
A procalcitonin test can help your health care provider determine if you have sepsis or another serious bacterial infection in the early stages. This may help you get treated promptly and avoid life-threatening complications.
Other names: PCT test
What is it used for?
A procalcitonin test may be used to help:
Diagnose sepsis and other bacterial infections, such as meningitis
Diagnose kidney infections in children with urinary tract infections
Determine the severity of a sepsis infection
Find out whether an infection or illness is caused by bacteria
Monitor the effectiveness of Antibiotics therapy
Why do I need a procalcitonin test?
You may need this test if you have symptoms of sepsis or another serious bacterial infection. These symptoms include:
Fever and chills
Sweating
Confusion
Extreme pain
Rapid heartbeat
Shortness of breath
Very low blood pressure
This test is usually performed in the hospital. It is mostly used for people who come to the emergency room for treatment and for people who are already in the hospital.
What do the results mean?
If your results show a high procalcitonin level, it's likely you have a serious bacterial infection such as sepsis or meningitis. The higher the level, the more severe your infection may be. If you are being treated for an infection, decreasing or low procalcitonin levels can show that your treatment is working.
Is there anything else I need to know about a procalcitonin test?
Procalcitonin tests are not as precise as other laboratory tests for infections. So your health care provider will need to review and/or order other tests before making a diagnosis. But a procalcitonin test does offer important information that can help your provider start treatment sooner and may help you avoid serious illness.
Wednesday, June 16, 2021
What is a lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) test?
When these tissues are damaged, they release LDH into the bloodstream or other body fluids. If your LDH blood or fluid levels are high, it may mean certain tissues in your body have been damaged by disease or injury.
Other names: LD test, lactic dehydrogenase, lactic acid dehydrogenase
What is it used for?
An LDH test is most often used to:
Find out if you have tissue damage
Monitor disorders that cause tissue damage. These include anemia, liver disease, lung disease, and some types of infections.
Monitor chemotherapy for certain types cancer. The test may show if treatment is working.
Why do I need an LDH test?
You may need this test if other tests and/or your symptoms indicate you have tissue damage or disease. Symptoms will vary depending on the type of tissue damage you have.
You may also need an LDH test if you are currently being treated for cancer.
What do the results mean?
Higher than normal LDH levels usually means you have some type of tissue damage or disease. Disorders that cause high LDH levels include:
Anemia
Kidney disease
Liver disease
Muscle injury
Heart attack
Pancreatitis
Infections, including meningitis, encephalitis, and infectious mononucleosis (mono)
Certain types of cancer, including lymphoma and leukemia. A higher than normal LDH level may also mean treatment for cancer is not working.
Although the test can show if you have tissue damage or disease, it does not show where the damage is located. If your results showed higher than normal LDH levels, your provider may need to order more tests to make a diagnosis. One of these tests may be an LDH isoenzyme test. An LDH isoenzyme test measures different forms of LDH. It can help your provider find out about the location, type, and severity of tissue damage.
Friday, June 11, 2021
What is D-dimer test?
D-Dimer is one of the fibrin degradation products. So when a body part is damaged or is bleeding from somewhere, the body tries to stop the bleeding by clumping together the cells there to make a network. That network is formed from a protein called fibrin. So vibrating starts together at the bleeding site and makes a blood clot. That blood clot is due to the crises crossing of fibrin. When the healing is done, or when the body thinks that the cloud is no longer necessary, it starts to degrade that clot and starts breaking down the fibrin. When the fibrin breaks down, it forms fibrin degradation products or FDPs. And one of the FDP is D-Dimer.
Why do we need D-Dimer during COVID?
The test shows the presence of clots in the body when COVID becomes serious. We get a lot of clots in the body in the lung especially, because of which reason the lungs cannot breathe. The blood flow is hampered due to clotting. So, the body tries to break down these clots. D dimer is detectable for up to eight hours after formation until the time the kidney clears it out.
What does the high or low level of D-Dimer mean?
A higher level of D dimer in the body shows that there is a lot of clot presence in the body which can be a dangerous sign when affected with COVID. So we use D-Dimer to assess for severity of COVID disease and if the patient is going to need oxygen in the future, because the higher their D-dimer, higher is the number of clots in the lungs and the higher the chances that they will need oxygen.