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Reading Your CBC

1-minute read 25 XP in app 6 cards

CBC — Complete Blood Count

The CBC measures red cells, white cells, and platelets. Most of its value is in spotting what's wrong — anaemia, infection, clotting issues. A few markers (hemoglobin, platelets, RDW) also carry real longevity information when interpreted well.

Fact

Hemoglobin — energy and altitude marker

Hemoglobin carries oxygen. Low (<13 for men, <12 for women) suggests anaemia or iron deficit — a common under-diagnosed fatigue cause in menstruating women. High (>17) can suggest dehydration, polycythemia, or sleep apnoea. Aim mid-range for performance.

13–17 mg/dL typical range
Fact

RDW — the sleeper longevity marker

Red cell distribution width (RDW) measures variation in red-cell size. Elevated RDW (above ~14.5%) independently predicts all-cause mortality in multiple large cohorts — often signalling subclinical nutritional deficits (B12, folate, iron) or chronic inflammation. Almost always overlooked by non-specialist readers.

< 13.5% optimal RDW
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Match CBC marker to its longevity signal

Connect each CBC component to what it actually tells you.

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Fact

Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) — chronic-stress proxy

NLR is calculated by dividing your neutrophil count by your lymphocyte count from the same CBC differential. It costs nothing extra to compute and serves as a chronic-inflammation + immune-stress marker that's been validated across cancer survival, post-MI prognosis, and ICU outcomes. Optimal: 1.0–2.0. Values above 3.0 — even with all individual components in normal range — flag systemic inflammation worth investigating. Trends over time matter more than a single reading.

1.0–2.0 optimal NLR
Takeaway

Key Takeaway

Most CBCs show everything in the green reference ranges and get waved through. Spend 60 seconds looking at hemoglobin, RDW, MCV, and the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio specifically. Subtle anaemia + nutritional deficits + chronic inflammation hide here and fix easily once spotted.

References

  1. RDW and all-cause mortality — meta-analysisPatel et al., 2014
  2. NLR as a prognostic biomarker — systematic reviewBuonacera et al., 2018

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Reading Your CMP