Complete Blood Count
Why am I having this test?
A complete blood count (CBC) is a blood test that measures the cells of your blood. The types of cells are red blood cells (RBCs), white blood cells (WBCs), and platelets. Changes in these cells can be a sign of many conditions, such as anemia, infection, inflammation, bleeding, and blood-related cancer.
You may have this test:
As part of a routine physical exam.
To help your health care provider diagnose certain health conditions.
To help your health care provider watch known health conditions or treatments.
What is being tested?
A CBC measures your RBCs, WBCs, platelets, and their different parts. RBCs are made in the tissue inside your bones (
bone marrow) and released into your blood. These cells contain a protein that carries oxygen in your blood (
hemoglobin). CBC testing of RBCs includes:
RBC count. This is the total number of RBCs.
Hemoglobin (Hb). This is the total amount of hemoglobin.
Hematocrit (Hct). This is the percentage of space that RBCs take up in your blood.
Mean corpuscular volume (MCV). This is the average size of RBCs.
Mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH). This is the average amount of hemoglobin inside each RBC.
Mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC). This is the average amount of hemoglobin contained (concentrated) inside each RBC.
RBC distribution width (RDW). This may be included to measure the differences in the size of RBCs.
WBCs are also made in your bone marrow. They are part of your body's disease-fighting system (
immune system). CBC testing of WBCs includes:
Platelets are cell fragments that are important for blood clotting. A CBC measures:
What kind of sample is taken?
A blood sample is required for this test. It is usually collected by inserting a needle into a blood vessel.
How are the results reported?
Your test results will be reported as values. Your health care provider will compare your results to normal ranges that were established after testing a large group of people (reference ranges). Reference ranges may vary among labs and hospitals. Reference ranges for a CBC usually apply only to people who are older than 18. For this test, common reference ranges for people older than 18 may be:
Red blood cells
- RBC count
Males: 4.7–6.1
Females: 4.2–5.4
- Hb
Males: 14–18
Females: 12–16
- Hct
Males: 42–52%
Females: 37–47%
-
MCV: 80–95
-
MCH: 27–31
-
MCHC: 32–36
-
RDW: 11–14.5%
White blood cells
-
WBC count: 5,000–10,000
-
Neutrophil count: 2,500–8,000 or 55–70%
-
Lymphocyte count: 1,000–4,000 or 20–40%
-
Monocyte count: 100–700 or 2–8%
-
Eosinophil count: 50–500 or 1–4%
-
Basophil count: 25–100 or 0.5–1%
Platelets
What do the results mean?
Results that are outside the reference ranges may mean that you have an infection or other health condition.
Red blood cells
- RBC count, Hb, and Hct
Results lower than the reference ranges may indicate anemia. Anemia may be caused by several conditions, such as a lack of iron (iron deficiency anemia).
Results higher than the reference ranges may mean you have too many RBCs (polycythemia). This may be caused by several conditions, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
- MCV, MCH, MCHC, and RDW
White blood cells
- WBC count
Results lower than the reference range may indicate an infection or a condition that keeps your bone marrow from making new WBCs.
Results higher than the reference range may indicate an infection, a condition that causes inflammation (autoimmune disease), or a blood-related cancer.
- Neutrophils, lymphocytes, and monocytes
- Eosinophils and basophils
Platelets
- Platelet count
Results lower than the reference range may indicate an infection or blood cell cancer.
Results higher than the reference range may indicate certain types of anemia, an autoimmune disease, or certain cancers.
- MPV
Talk with your health care provider about what your results mean.
Questions to ask your health care provider
Ask your health care provider, or the department that is doing the test:
When will my results be ready?
How will I get my results?
What are my treatment options?
What other tests do I need?
What are my next steps?
This information is not intended to replace advice given to you by your health care provider. Make sure you discuss any questions you have with your health care provider.