Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 208903

Shown: posts 1 to 8 of 8. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

Basic biology blood work for those who may know

Posted by ~Alii~ on March 13, 2003, at 23:34:50

Ok. What does this mean?

Platelet count: out of range 114 L (units THOUS/MCL ref. range 140-400)
Absolute Neutrophils: out of range 133L (units CELLS/MCL ref. range 1500-7800)

The second one seems to be the one drawing concern. Someone with basic blood knowledge please chime in.

Thanks

~Alii

 

Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know

Posted by Larry Hoover on March 14, 2003, at 6:33:44

In reply to Basic biology blood work for those who may know, posted by ~Alii~ on March 13, 2003, at 23:34:50

> Ok. What does this mean?
>
> Platelet count: out of range 114 L (units THOUS/MCL ref. range 140-400)

This is going to make your blood less likely to clot, and bleeding could be of serious concern if you get a significant wound of any sort.

> Absolute Neutrophils: out of range 133L (units CELLS/MCL ref. range 1500-7800)

This is called neutropenia, and indicates that your bone marrow is not producing anywhere near enough of these white blood cells. You are at significant risk should an infection occur, as your body does not have the tools required to fight the infection. It is very important that the cause of this condition be discovered, so you can expect some follow-up testing.

> The second one seems to be the one drawing concern. Someone with basic blood knowledge please chime in.
>
> Thanks
>
> ~Alii

The possible causes for these low values are of a great variety of things. I hope the cause is obvious, in your case, and easily treated.

Lar

 

Thank you for info (nm) » Larry Hoover

Posted by ~Alii~ on March 14, 2003, at 8:49:09

In reply to Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know, posted by Larry Hoover on March 14, 2003, at 6:33:44

 

Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know » Larry Hoover

Posted by ~Alii~ on March 14, 2003, at 9:25:09

In reply to Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know, posted by Larry Hoover on March 14, 2003, at 6:33:44

> > Ok. What does this mean?
> > Platelet count: out of range 114 L (units THOUS/MCL ref. range 140-400)
> This is going to make your blood less likely to clot, and bleeding could be of serious concern if you get a significant wound of any sort.

so no running with scissors, right?

> > Absolute Neutrophils: out of range 133L (units CELLS/MCL ref. range 1500-7800)
> This is called neutropenia, and indicates that your bone marrow is not producing anywhere near enough of these white blood cells. You are at significant risk should an infection occur, as your body does not have the tools required to fight the infection. It is very important that the cause of this condition be discovered, so you can expect some follow-up testing.

Yes I expect the second round of results this Monday and see a hematologist a week from now. Testing will be a part of it all. A fun filled needle sucking week. I'm packin tangerine juice and pb crackers and cheese so I won't get woozy after they steal several vials from me again. Test away they will. And I'll pay dearly for this privelegde. No insurance makes such things of great concern since each visit is almost if not more than a rent payment and that gets sticky in my situation. Only bonus I can think of is the bitchin bandaids they put on me to cover the track marks they're giving me from poking me for blood so frequently. They're going to my hands next. This is getting good folks. All this for a tasmanian devil bandage or a sea life one with orca, dolphins, manatees, and sharks (ok so it's not real).

> > The second one seems to be the one drawing concern. Someone with basic blood knowledge please chime in.
> > Thanks
> > ~Alii

> The possible causes for these low values are of a great variety of things. I hope the cause is obvious, in your case, and easily treated.
>
> Lar


I'm crossing my fingers until next week and probably for a week after that for tests to come back to figure out just why these things are so low. Hopefully it is something easy but if not then I can honestly say the root cause of whatever it may be is years and years of depression. Crushing depression.

Blah.

~Alii

 

Re: Lab test site » ~Alii~

Posted by jane d on March 14, 2003, at 22:18:07

In reply to Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know » Larry Hoover, posted by ~Alii~ on March 14, 2003, at 9:25:09

This site may help. Good luck. http://www.labtestsonline.org/understanding/analytes/wbc/test.html

 

Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know

Posted by Larry Hoover on March 15, 2003, at 10:48:13

In reply to Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know » Larry Hoover, posted by ~Alii~ on March 14, 2003, at 9:25:09

> > > Ok. What does this mean?
> > > Platelet count: out of range 114 L (units THOUS/MCL ref. range 140-400)
> > This is going to make your blood less likely to clot, and bleeding could be of serious concern if you get a significant wound of any sort.
>
> so no running with scissors, right?

Ya, that's right. <grin> Not that you'd do that anyway, would you?

> > > Absolute Neutrophils: out of range 133L (units CELLS/MCL ref. range 1500-7800)
> > This is called neutropenia, and indicates that your bone marrow is not producing anywhere near enough of these white blood cells. You are at significant risk should an infection occur, as your body does not have the tools required to fight the infection. It is very important that the cause of this condition be discovered, so you can expect some follow-up testing.
>
> Yes I expect the second round of results this Monday and see a hematologist a week from now. Testing will be a part of it all. A fun filled needle sucking week. I'm packin tangerine juice and pb crackers and cheese so I won't get woozy after they steal several vials from me again. Test away they will. And I'll pay dearly for this privelegde. No insurance makes such things of great concern since each visit is almost if not more than a rent payment and that gets sticky in my situation.

I can't think of anything that aggravates me more than the injustice of the world's richest nation failing to provide the most basic of medical care to all of its citizens. Surely it costs more in the long run to fail to treat in a timely and effective manner.

What on earth are you going to do to afford treatment, once the cause of your disorder is discovered?

>Only bonus I can think of is the bitchin bandaids they put on me to cover the track marks they're giving me from poking me for blood so frequently. They're going to my hands next. This is getting good folks. All this for a tasmanian devil bandage or a sea life one with orca, dolphins, manatees, and sharks (ok so it's not real).

I like your sense of humour.

> > > The second one seems to be the one drawing concern. Someone with basic blood knowledge please chime in.
> > > Thanks
> > > ~Alii
>
> > The possible causes for these low values are of a great variety of things. I hope the cause is obvious, in your case, and easily treated.
> >
> > Lar
>
>
> I'm crossing my fingers until next week and probably for a week after that for tests to come back to figure out just why these things are so low. Hopefully it is something easy but if not then I can honestly say the root cause of whatever it may be is years and years of depression. Crushing depression.
>
> Blah.
>
> ~Alii

Some of the causes include relatively easy-to-treat infections like tuberculosis. However, there are other difficult-to-treat (read expensive) causes, some of which may be life-threatening in the long run. I'm hoping not to scare you, but aren't there hospitals that have to treat you, regardless of your insurance status? Health should not depend on financial status (an unabashedly political opinion).

Lar

 

Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know

Posted by stjames on March 15, 2003, at 19:40:26

In reply to Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know, posted by Larry Hoover on March 15, 2003, at 10:48:13

but aren't there hospitals that have to treat you, regardless of your insurance status? Health should not depend on financial status (an unabashedly political opinion).

Yes and no. You really have to be smart and advocate if the treatment is free. On the the staff, a guy in his 20's just died from XLA. He
had been seeing free clinics all his life for the
infections and no one asked the question "Why is
a young man getting so many infections". 3 days before he died the hospital started giving him gamma globlin, which his body did not make, due to XLA. That is all the treatment he ever needed to live a normal life. But it was too late.

 

there are no debtor's prisons in Amerika » Larry Hoover

Posted by ~Alii~ on March 16, 2003, at 21:58:08

In reply to Re: Basic biology blood work for those who may know, posted by Larry Hoover on March 15, 2003, at 10:48:13

> What on earth are you going to do to afford treatment, once the cause of your disorder is discovered?
>

Go into debt or in the case of something that would end my dwelling on this plane I would perhaps just choose not to aggressively fight it. Who knows?

> Some of the causes include relatively easy-to-treat infections like tuberculosis. However, there are other difficult-to-treat (read expensive) causes, some of which may be life-threatening in the long run. I'm hoping not to scare you, but aren't there hospitals that have to treat you, regardless of your insurance status? Health should not depend on financial status (an unabashedly political opinion).
>
> Lar


Yeah there should be places to get treatment without money but they ain't around here. I'm just coming up with the money for the tests---first round anyway. If/when I might get hospitalized then I begin racking up debt like any other red blooded american. If I'm not well enough to be out of a hospital room then I'm sure I won't be long for this earth. There are no debtor's prisons in America.

~a.


This is the end of the thread.


Show another thread

URL of post in thread:


Psycho-Babble Medication | Extras | FAQ


[dr. bob] Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, bob@dr-bob.org

Script revised: February 4, 2008
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/cgi-bin/pb/mget.pl
Copyright 2006-17 Robert Hsiung.
Owned and operated by Dr. Bob LLC and not the University of Chicago.