My haematologist occasionally drops extra blood test codes in with my regular ones without explaining what they are for and this site has helped me to decipher the codes and hence the purpose of tests. Useful if you want to know how you are travelling but could perhaps be a bit confronting if you'd rather just leave this to the medicos. After finding out I could have been diagnosed with SLL/CLL several years earlier if I'd asked for a copy of my blood test results and followed up an anomalous reading, I now make sure I get a copy of ALL my test results and ask my doctor or haematologist what the implications are if anything is outside the normal range or significantly different from my normal levels.
There are blood test tracking spreadsheet templates available here:
I'm of the school of thought, that I don't need anything more to worry about, so blood counts are totally off my radar, I figure my doctors will let me know if I have ITP, neutropenia, or rapidly rising lymphocytes, LDH and so on...
So far it has been a good strategy for me, but everyone is different...
Honestly, I don't care about labs, I care about how I feel...
I used to be as trusting. Then I discovered my SLL/CLL could have been diagnosed in 2010 or earlier. The good thing? Three years at least of W&W went by without my worrying. I thank God it wasn't breast cancer!
patientpower.info/video/und... Information videos by Dr Susan Leclair, chancellor professor in the department of medical laboratory science at the University of Massachusetts:
Understanding Your CLL Blood Tests: Immunoglobulin, Complete Blood Counts, Platelets and More
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