Thursday, May 14, 2015

5 Tips about the routine labs


I remember wondering why hematology was the first topic of clinical medicine during the didactic year of my program. Now I know why... A complete blood cell count (CBC) has been ordered on virtually every patient. The CBC gives you a quick inside look on a patient's energy status, infection status, and immune status. In addition to the CBC, a basic metabolic panel and urinalysis are the other two fundamental orders completing the lab trifecta. Conditions like anemia, infection and UTI are fairly easy to detect based on these labs. Here are 5 tips I have learned in the clinical setting regarding these labs that you might not know:



1. Hemoglobin and hematocrit are often elevated in smokers because the body is trying to churn out more RBCs in the face of chronic hypoxemia.

2. When the urine is negative for RBCs but positive for blood, think rhabdo. Muscle wasting of rhabdomyolysis releases myoglobin which yields positive blood but negative RBCs.

3. If the UA yields > 50 squamous cells, it is a dirty catch. Repeat the urinalysis.

4. A high BUN should raise suspicion of either a real volume depletion (most likely a GI bleed) or a perceived volume depletion. Recall a high BUN:Crt ratio (>20:1) is indicative of pre-renal failure.

5. Pay attention to potassium in patients with suspected diabetic ketoacidosis. Levels may be normal or elevated at initial presentation because the cells are spilling K+ into the blood in favor of absorbing H+.