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Originally Posted by Cold Iron
Ok, just wondering what some of this mean
HDL: .89 |.9 - 1.6| "good" cholesterol; this number is fine, HDL can be increased with exercise; are your total cholesterol, LDL and triglycerides within "normal"? Platelets: 138 |145 - 400| blood clotting; again, fine--other references list "normal" as 130 or 140 to 400 WBC: 4.4 |4.0 - 11| White Blood Cells; immune system--did you get a differential with this? also fine. CR: 115 |60 - 110| Creatinine; kidney function but can be influenced by diet. UA: 482 |200 - 400| Uric Acid; again, kidney function, typically associated with gout when largely elevated (yours isn't), its a waste product The only concern with all this IMHO is that you have elevation of 2 tests of kidney function. Is your BUN normal? Personally, I'd get the test repeated in a few months to compare but your numbers are very close to "normal" so alone they aren't statistically significant, just something to watch. HCT: .48 |.38 - .490| Hematocrit; % of red blood cells in total blood volume. this is great. These are some of the numbers that concern me. The "normal" ranges aren't exclusive for everyone. All of your results are so close to normal or within normal that I wouldn't worry about it. Kidney levels can be influenced by water intake, diet and supplements so your elevation could be due to that, but you may want to keep an eye on these. |

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Originally Posted by PirateFromHell
The UA, CR, and BUN can all be thrown off if you are slightly dehydrated, which I usaually tend to be after fasting for the 12 hours prior to the test. Your HDL/LDL risk ratio is more important than your HDL value.
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Originally Posted by hardasnails1973
This are common if you were on a high protein diet or a prohormone cycles. Instead of hdl/ldl ratio it may be advisible to look into homocysteine levels which are a better indicator of heart disease then cholesterol ratios. Low HDL are usual associtated with steroids or prohormone cycles. Drs need to look more deeper then just normal test levels becuase there are things that can hide and come out quickly to bite us in the ass and leave drs wondering why. From seeing these results I would highly suggest uptaking your zinc to atleast 15 from multivitamin and another 30 mgs before going to bed as well as adding in a b complex 100 mgs 2 times a day because little do people know that high protein diets tend to alter your homocysteine levels even though that your numbers all look "in the range" it the homocysteine levels that will put you in the grave faster then anything. From now on in blood test I am having them check for zinc plasma levels ,5PLP plasma, homocysteine, ferritin levels as well. These additional tests will give indicatioins of how hard athletes are low and prevent severe reprocussions in the future. Over 70% of elite athletes are low in zinc, and number of athletes are low in b6. Ever hear of ZMA it is a very vital supplement for athletes but the reasoning goes further then just performance. It is also vital for your heart and over all health. Elevated homocysteine levels are common in 90% of america and people do not even know they have them. And if you are zinc deficent then you can not activate vitamin b6 to its active form and then the cascade of events begin from depression to digestion problems as well you will expreince symptoms of b other vitamins even though you have supply of them. This will leave drs baffled I am sure. hope this helps
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Originally Posted by Kimber
Cold Iron: BUN=blood urea nitrogen--another kidney test. you're welcome.
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Originally Posted by Cold Iron
Would any of these low levels be from the mononucleosis I had last yr?
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Originally Posted by hardasnails1973
high bun = high protein diet or high creatine levels if taking them, in lamens turns your kidneys are trying to assimulate protein waste. What may help here is to the added b-6 from the ZMA to help digest the extra protein. Or what also can help if you take a digestive enzymes mixture with heavier meals to add digestion. Or simple add some bromolaine to aid in the extra protein digestion. Your body has an enzyme bank and once it gets depleted then you run into major problems. Salting foods with sea salts also kicks up your digestive enzymes as well and is probably the cheapest easiest solution. People do not take alot of supplements because you get them from your food. Problems people run into is when they start malabsorbing nutrient due to stressful life styles then one must supplement what they may be lacking.
Rule of thumb : do not go supplementing with huge amounts of vitamins and minerals other wise your going to cause imbalances in other nutrients as well. unless supervised by a trained phyisican for a specific aliment example too much zinc cause a imbalance in copper, iron, calcium and blood tests are not accurate means of measuring minerals in the tissue. In order to see what is really going on you need RBC or plasma levels for true nutrient readings. Serum can give indicators, but can be deceptive becuase body has make up systems which will keep certain readings with in a tight range. multivitain/mineral -lunch time calcium supplement - another meal before bed extra zinc if you are taking it. Zinc no more then 40 mgs total unless medically supervised alot of people take vitamins at breakfast and it is not best to reason being most breakfast will interfer with abosrption of over 50% of vitamins. Alot of people do not know this. Ask your self this "why are people so lacking in certain nutrients, but they take a multivitamin" coffee and oatmeal bind have whats called phylates in them that bind to several minerals and you piss them out never being absorbed. i found out the hard way of this !! Homocysteine information and you can see how zinc is linked as well as b-6 in the reactions http://www.upnaway.com/~poliowa/homo...0unveiled.html article on mineral malabsorption from diet http://www.theomnivore.com/phytate-and-magnesium.html http://www.musclephotos.com/minerals.html article on zinc http://www.musclephotos.com/zinc2.html http://www.musclephotos.com/supplemt.html |
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Originally Posted by Kimber
Probably not, maybe could still be affecting your WBC's but that would show up more in the differential (the breakdown of types of WBC's that may or may not have been included in your test). Platelet levels are affected by bleeding most commonly.
Bilirubin is the result of red blood cell breakdown--basically your spleen pulls the heme group (oxygen carrier) off the red blood cell and recycles it and the rest of the crap is sent to the liver where its combined with some bile from the gall bladder and sent to the small intestine where its crapped out. Long story shorter: its an indicator of gall bladder and liver function. You can get bromelain from eating pineapple. |