Every Lab Biomarker, Explained

61 blood test biomarkers in plain English. Reference ranges, what high and low results mean, when to act, and how each value connects to the others on your panel. Reviewed by clinicians. No paywall.

All biomarkers (A–Z)

Complete Blood Count

(8)

Complete Blood Count (CBC): What Each Value Means and How to Read the Whole Panel

The CBC is the most common blood test in medicine. What hemoglobin, hematocrit, RBC, MCV, MCH, RDW, white blood cells, and platelets each mean — and how to read them as a single picture, not 25 isolated numbers.

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Hematocrit (HCT): Normal Range, What High and Low Mean

Hematocrit is the percentage of your blood made up of red blood cells. Normal range, what high and low values mean, why it tracks tightly with hemoglobin, and how dehydration distorts it.

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Red Blood Cell (RBC) Count: Normal Range, What High and Low Mean

The RBC count is the number of red blood cells per microliter. Normal range, what high and low values mean, and why RBC alone is rarely the most useful number on a CBC.

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MCV (Mean Corpuscular Volume): Normal Range, What High and Low Mean

MCV is the average size of your red blood cells. Normal range is 80–100 fL. Low MCV (microcytic) usually means iron deficiency. High MCV (macrocytic) usually means B12, folate, alcohol, or hypothyroidism.

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MCH (Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin): Normal Range, What Low and High Mean

MCH is the average amount of hemoglobin per red blood cell. Normal range is 27–33 pg. Low MCH (hypochromic) usually means iron deficiency or thalassemia. What MCH adds beyond MCV.

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RDW (Red Cell Distribution Width): The Underrated CBC Number

RDW measures variation in red blood cell size. Normal range is 11.5–14.5%. High RDW is one of the earliest signs of nutritional deficiency and a quietly powerful predictor of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.

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White Blood Cell (WBC) Count: How to Read the Differential

WBC count alone tells you very little, the differential drives interpretation. What high and low WBC mean, the patterns of bacterial vs viral vs allergic vs malignant disease, and when neutropenia is an emergency.

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Platelets: How to Read Your Platelet Count

Platelets clot blood. What thrombocytopenia (low) and thrombocytosis (high) mean, why iron deficiency raises platelets, why EDTA clumping causes false-low results, and when platelet counts are a bleeding emergency.

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Diabetes & Glucose

(3)

Lipid Panel

(5)

Liver Function

(6)

ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase): What Your Liver Enzyme Says About Your Health

ALT is the most sensitive blood test for liver injury. Normal range, what mildly elevated ALT means (almost always fatty liver), when to worry, and the new MASLD/NAFLD diagnostic landscape in 2026.

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AST (Aspartate Aminotransferase): Normal Range, What High AST Means

AST is a liver and muscle enzyme paired with ALT on every metabolic panel. Normal range, what high AST means, the AST/ALT ratio that distinguishes alcohol from fatty liver, and when to act.

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Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP): Normal Range, What High ALP Means

Alkaline phosphatase rises in liver, bile duct, and bone disease — and the patterns differ. Normal range, how GGT distinguishes liver from bone, why pediatric values are far higher, and when ALP warrants imaging.

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Bilirubin (Total, Direct, Indirect): Normal Range, What High Bilirubin Means

Total bilirubin is the sum of direct and indirect — and the split is what matters. Normal range, why high indirect usually means hemolysis or Gilbert's syndrome, why high direct points at biliary obstruction, and when jaundice warrants urgent care.

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Albumin: Normal Range, What Low Albumin Means

Albumin reflects liver synthetic function, nutritional status, and chronic illness — and it is the value used to correct calcium. Normal range, why low albumin matters more than high, and when to act.

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GGT (Gamma-Glutamyl Transferase): Normal Range, What High GGT Means

GGT is the most sensitive blood marker for biliary disease and alcohol use. Normal range, why it sorts liver from bone when ALP is high, what raises it (alcohol, NAFLD, medications), and when it warrants action.

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Kidney Function

(2)

Metabolic Panel

(1)

Metabolic

(1)

Electrolytes

(4)

Thyroid

(3)

Vitamins & Nutrients

(3)

Iron Studies

(2)

Inflammation

(4)

Cardiovascular markers

(1)

Hormones

(10)

Total Testosterone: Normal Range, What High and Low Mean (Men and Women)

Total testosterone normal range for adult men is roughly 264–916 ng/dL, but levels swing with time of day, age, and illness. What low T really means, when treatment is justified, and why a single number is rarely enough.

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Free Testosterone: Normal Range, Why It Matters When SHBG Is Off

Free testosterone is the bioavailable fraction (~2% of total) and the test that disambiguates real androgen status when SHBG is high or low. Normal ranges by sex and age, calculated vs. measured, when to order it.

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SHBG (Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin): What High and Low Mean

SHBG is the carrier protein that decides how much of your testosterone and estradiol is biologically available. Low SHBG flags insulin resistance and metabolic disease; high SHBG flags hyperthyroidism, oral estrogen, or liver disease.

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DHEA-S: Normal Range by Age, What High and Low Mean

DHEA-S is the most abundant adrenal androgen and a useful marker of adrenal androgen production. Normal range by age, when high DHEA-S points to PCOS or adrenal disease, and the (limited) evidence for DHEA supplementation.

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Estradiol (E2): Normal Range by Cycle Phase, Menopause, and in Men

Estradiol is the primary estrogen and the most clinically useful one to measure. Reference ranges by menstrual cycle phase, postmenopausal cutoffs, the small but real range in men, and how estradiol guides fertility and HRT decisions.

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Progesterone: Normal Range by Cycle Phase, Pregnancy, and Day-21 Testing

Progesterone confirms ovulation and supports early pregnancy. Mid-luteal (day 21) progesterone above 5 ng/mL confirms ovulation. Reference ranges by cycle phase and trimester, and what high or low progesterone means.

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FSH (Follicle-Stimulating Hormone): Normal Range, Menopause, Day-3 Testing

FSH drives follicle development in women and sperm production in men. Day 3 FSH evaluates ovarian reserve; sustained FSH above 25 mIU/mL with amenorrhea confirms menopause. Reference ranges by cycle phase and what high or low FSH means.

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LH (Luteinizing Hormone): Normal Range, the Ovulation Surge, LH/FSH Ratio

LH triggers ovulation and stimulates testosterone production in men. Normal range by cycle phase, the mid-cycle surge, the LH/FSH ratio in PCOS, and what high or low LH means.

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Prolactin: Normal Range, Causes of High Prolactin, and When to Image the Pituitary

Prolactin above 25 ng/mL in women or 20 in men is hyperprolactinemia. Causes range from medications and hypothyroidism to prolactinomas, values above 100–150 ng/mL strongly suggest a pituitary adenoma. What to test, what to image, and when to treat.

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AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone): Ovarian Reserve, IVF Planning, PCOS

AMH is the best single marker of ovarian reserve and a key planning number for fertility, IVF response, and timing decisions. Reference ranges by age, what high AMH means in PCOS, and what low AMH says about menopause timing.

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Tumor Markers

(5)

PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen): What the Test Actually Tells You About Prostate Cancer Risk

PSA is a prostate health marker, not a cancer test. Normal ranges, why a single elevated value rarely means cancer, age-specific cutoffs, free-PSA ratio, and the 2026 evidence on screening vs. monitoring.

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CA-125: A Useful Ovarian Cancer Monitoring Tool, Not a Screening Test

CA-125 is widely misunderstood. It is not recommended for ovarian cancer screening in average-risk women. Normal range, common benign causes of elevation, and where the test is genuinely evidence-based in 2026.

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CA 19-9: A Pancreatic Cancer Monitoring Tool with Big Caveats

CA 19-9 is not a pancreatic cancer screening test. About 5–10% of people genetically cannot make it. Where CA 19-9 is genuinely useful, why so many elevations are benign, and the 2026 evidence on monitoring known disease.

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CEA (Carcinoembryonic Antigen): Colorectal Cancer Surveillance, Not Screening

CEA is a colorectal cancer monitoring tool, not a screening test. Smokers run higher baselines. Where CEA is genuinely useful (surveillance after surgery) and why elevations in healthy people are rarely cancer.

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AFP (Alpha-Fetoprotein): Liver Cancer Surveillance, Germ Cell Tumors, and Pregnancy Screening

AFP is the main blood-based marker for hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance in cirrhosis, and a tumor marker for testicular and ovarian germ cell tumors. Normal range, why it is not a general cancer screen, and how to interpret elevations.

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Hemograma completo

(1)

Diabetes y glucosa

(1)

Panel de lípidos

(1)

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All Lab Biomarkers (61+) | AskAnything.health | AskAnything.health