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Lab Result Range Decoder

Pick a common blood test. Enter your value. See the reference range, where you fall, and what abnormal could mean.

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Your doctor sends you the lab results PDF, and there is a "L" or "H" next to a number you do not recognize. This tool decodes the most common lab values: where you fall relative to reference range, what abnormal could mean, and what to bring up at your next appointment. Educational only - it does not diagnose, and you should always discuss results with your clinician.
01

What "reference range" actually means

A lab reference range is the interval where 95% of healthy adults fall - meaning 5% of completely healthy people are outside the range by definition. That is why a single value just outside the range is rarely an emergency; it is a signal to look more carefully.

Reference ranges also vary:

  • By lab. Different labs use different reagents and instruments. Quest, LabCorp, and your hospital lab can have slightly different ranges for the same test.
  • By population. Sex, age, race, pregnancy status, and even time of day can shift ranges.
  • By units. US uses conventional units (mg/dL); much of the rest of the world uses SI units (mmol/L). Mixing them up is a real source of confusion.

The ranges in this tool are typical adult ranges in US conventional units. Your specific lab's report is the ground truth for your value.

02

The 12 most-ordered tests we decode

We cover the tests that show up on routine annual physicals and the most common follow-ups:

  • Complete Blood Count panel: Hemoglobin, Hematocrit, Ferritin (iron stores)
  • Metabolic panel: Fasting glucose, A1C, Creatinine, ALT
  • Lipid panel: LDL, HDL, Triglycerides
  • Thyroid: TSH
  • Vitamins: Vitamin D (25-OH)

For tests we do not cover, ask your Lab Results Copilot to walk through the values.

03

Common misinterpretations to avoid

A few patterns where the literal value is misleading:

  • Low ferritin with normal hemoglobin. This is iron-deficient pre-anemia. Common in menstruating women, vegetarians, and endurance athletes. Hemoglobin still looks fine because your body is depleting stores to keep red cells stable - but symptoms (fatigue, hair loss, restless legs) often appear before the hemoglobin tanks.
  • TSH in the "normal" range but at the high end. A TSH of 3.5 is technically normal (range 0.4-4.0) but many endocrinologists treat values over 2.5 in patients with symptoms.
  • LDL "borderline" with high HDL. Your LDL/HDL ratio matters more than LDL alone for cardiovascular risk.
  • A1C 5.7-6.4 is pre-diabetes, not "almost normal." This is the window where lifestyle changes have the highest impact - waiting until 6.5 (diabetes diagnosis) is missing the prevention window.
  • Vitamin D 20-29 is technically "insufficient," not "normal" or "deficient." Many practitioners treat values under 30 as worth supplementing.
04

What to ask your doctor

If a value is abnormal, useful follow-up questions:

  1. What might be causing this? Most labs have several common explanations - get the differential, not just a "let's recheck in 3 months."
  2. Should we run any follow-up tests? A single abnormal value often warrants confirmation or a related panel (e.g., low ferritin → full iron studies).
  3. What lifestyle changes could improve this? Most values respond to diet, exercise, sleep, or stress changes.
  4. If this value is borderline, what would we do if it crossed the line? Knowing the treatment threshold helps you and your doctor monitor trends, not just snapshot values.
  5. How often should we recheck this? Annual? In 3 months? After a specific intervention?
05

What this tool absolutely does not do

This is an educational reference, not a diagnostic tool. We do not:

  • Account for your specific medications, conditions, or pregnancy status
  • Use sex- or age-specific reference ranges (general adult ranges only)
  • Tell you whether a value is "concerning" in your individual context
  • Replace your doctor's interpretation of the full clinical picture

For lab interpretation that considers your specific history and medications, use our Lab Results Copilot or - for anything that worries you - call your doctor.

When to use this
  • Patients reviewing their annual physical results before the follow-up appointment
  • People tracking lab trends across multiple draws
  • Caregivers helping aging parents understand their results
  • Endurance athletes monitoring iron, ferritin, and vitamin D
  • Anyone trying to understand a "borderline" value they were told not to worry about
𝑓How the math works
Reference ranges are pulled from typical US adult lab norms (Quest, LabCorp, Mayo, Cleveland Clinic published ranges). The visual axis displays the typical range of lab-observed values for each test. Your value is plotted relative to the normal-range band; the verdict (Low/Normal/High) compares your value to the standard adult range. Sex- and age-specific ranges are not modeled.
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Frequently asked questions

My lab report shows a different normal range than yours - which is right?
Your lab's range is the ground truth for your specific test. Reference ranges vary by lab equipment and population. Use this tool for context; use your lab report for decisions.
Is my value safe to enter here?
Yes. Everything runs in your browser. No values are sent to our servers, logged, or stored.
Why is my "normal" value flagged as worth discussing?
Some values in the normal range still warrant attention - borderline TSH, lower-end vitamin D, etc. The tool surfaces patterns that are technically normal but commonly worth a conversation.
Can this tool tell me if I have a specific condition?
No. It cannot and should not. Lab values are one input among many a clinician uses to diagnose. Always discuss results with your doctor.
Why are sex-specific reference ranges not used?
For simplicity. Several tests (hemoglobin, ferritin, creatinine) do have sex-specific ranges that we plan to add. For those tests, our current ranges err toward general adult norms.
The real value

A tool gives you a number.
A copilot gives you a plan.

Lab Results Copilot takes everything this tool surfaces and walks you through what to actually do with it. Free to start, no card needed.

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