MCH — mean corpuscular hemoglobin — is the average amount of hemoglobin packed into a single red blood cell, measured in picograms (pg). It tracks closely with MCV (cell size) because larger cells generally carry more hemoglobin and smaller cells generally carry less.
MCH adds little independent information when MCV is already known. The clinical value of MCH is mostly in confirming a microcytic, hypochromic pattern (low MCV + low MCH) that points strongly at iron deficiency or thalassemia.
What MCH measures
MCH is calculated as hemoglobin divided by RBC count, then expressed in picograms per cell. A typical adult red cell carries about 30 pg of hemoglobin. Modern automated analyzers compute it directly from the two measured values.
MCHC (mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration) is the related but distinct value: hemoglobin divided by hematocrit, expressed as g/dL. MCHC reflects how concentrated the hemoglobin is within each cell and is more useful for spotting hereditary spherocytosis (high MCHC) and certain other red cell membrane disorders.
MCH reference range
| Demographic | Low | High | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypochromic | 0 | 26.9 | pg |
| Normal | 27 | 33 | pg |
| Hyperchromic | 33.1 | 50 | pg |
- Hypochromic: below 27 pg.
- Normal: 27–33 pg.
- Hyperchromic: above 33 pg.
MCH usually moves in step with MCV. A microcytic anemia (low MCV) without low MCH is unusual; macrocytic anemia (high MCV) typically shows high MCH.
What high MCH means
High MCH means cells are carrying more hemoglobin than usual — almost always because the cells are larger (macrocytic). The differential is essentially the differential for high MCV:
- Vitamin B12 deficiency
- Folate deficiency
- Hypothyroidism
- Liver disease
- Alcohol
- Certain medications (hydroxyurea, zidovudine, methotrexate, antiretrovirals)
- Reticulocytosis (large young cells from acute blood loss or hemolysis)
- Myelodysplastic syndromes
Isolated high MCH without high MCV is uncommon and rarely clinically meaningful on its own.
What low MCH means
Low MCH means cells are underfilled with hemoglobin — "hypochromic." This pattern almost always travels with low MCV and points at:
- Iron deficiency — most common cause; ferritin is the confirmatory test.
- Thalassemia trait — both alpha and beta. Hemoglobin electrophoresis confirms beta thalassemia.
- Anemia of chronic disease — usually milder hypochromia than iron deficiency.
- Lead poisoning — rare; consider in pediatric exposure or occupational risk.
- Sideroblastic anemia — rare; congenital or acquired.
Hypochromia visible on a peripheral blood smear (a wider central pallor in the red cells) is a classic finding in iron deficiency that the lab tech sometimes notes alongside the automated MCH value.
Reading MCH alongside the rest of the CBC
The clinical pattern that MCH helps confirm is "microcytic hypochromic anemia": low hemoglobin, low MCV, low MCH, often with high RDW. That combination strongly suggests iron deficiency, especially when ferritin is low.
If MCV is low and MCH is normal, the cells are dense small cells — more typical of thalassemia trait than iron deficiency. The pattern is subtle and best interpreted alongside ferritin, transferrin saturation, and possibly hemoglobin electrophoresis.
MCH responds slowly to treatment, on the same timescale as MCV — 4–6 weeks to begin moving and 2–3 months to normalize.
Track this biomarker over time in AskAnything.health — upload your lab results and see trends at a glance.
When MCH warrants attention
MCH abnormalities are usually addressed via the underlying anemia, not the MCH number itself. The thresholds that drive action:
- MCH below 24 pg with anemia — workup for iron deficiency and thalassemia.
- MCH above 35 pg — workup for B12, folate, hypothyroidism, alcohol, liver disease, and (in older adults) myelodysplastic syndromes.
- Isolated abnormal MCH with normal MCV — usually computational or transient; recheck the CBC in 2–4 weeks before pursuing extensive workup.
This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider about your lab results.
Tests that complete the picture
- Hemoglobin, MCV, MCHC, RDW — the full red cell line interprets MCH.
- Ferritin and transferrin saturation — iron deficiency.
- Vitamin B12 and folate — macrocytic patterns.
- Hemoglobin electrophoresis — thalassemia, hemoglobinopathies.
- Peripheral blood smear — visual confirmation of hypochromia and abnormal cell shapes.
- TSH, AST/ALT — for high MCH/MCV.