Deuchainn Fala Ro Lèigh-lann: Na deuchainnean a bhios dotairean mar as trice ag iarraidh

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Pre-Op Testing Mìneachadh deuchainn fala Ùrachadh 2026 Càirdeil don euslainteach

Most surgical patients need fewer tests than they expect. The real issue is knowing which results would actually change anesthesia, bleeding risk, or timing.

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📝 Air fhoillseachadh: 🩺 Air ath-sgrùdadh gu meidigeach: ✅ Stèidhichte air fianais
⚡ Geàrr-chunntas luath v1.0 —
  1. CBC is the most common pre-op test; hemoglobin below 8 g/dL often triggers extra review before elective surgery.
  2. Plàtaichean normally range from 150-450 x10^9/L; many procedures can proceed above 50 x10^9/L, but brain or eye surgery often wants more than 100 x10^9/L.
  3. Potasium is usually safest between 3.5-5.0 mmol/L; levels below 3.0 or above 5.5 mmol/L can delay anesthesia.
  4. INR is normally 0.8-1.2 in patients not taking warfarin; many surgical teams want INR below 1.5 before invasive procedures.
  5. eGFR de 60 mL/min/1.73 m² or higher is generally reassuring; lower values can change fluid and drug planning.
  6. HbA1c de 6.5% no nas àirde supports diabetes; some elective programs postpone surgery when HbA1c is above 8.0-8.5%.
  7. Type and screen may need repeating within 72 uair a thìde if you were pregnant or transfused in the previous 3 mìosan.
  8. Pregnancy testing often turns positive at hCG 20-25 mIU/mL and can change medication or imaging decisions even when surgery still proceeds.
  9. Routine testing can be skipped in many healthy adults having low-risk surgery when history and examination are unremarkable.

Which pre-op blood tests are usually ordered?

Most people having surgery do chan eil need a giant panel. A typical blood test before surgery is a targeted mix of CBC, BMP or CMP, sometimes PT/INR or aPTT, agus type and screen if transfusion is possible; healthy patients having low-risk procedures may need no blood work at all.

Pre-op collection tubes with lavender, blue, and gold tops arranged on a sterile tray
Figear 1: The tube colors often reflect the commonest pre-op orders: CBC, chemistry, and clotting tests

The standard pre-op order set is smaller than most patients expect. In my experience, the useful question is whether a result will change anesthesia, bleeding planning, or timing — and that is exactly how we teach patients to read pre-op panels on an anailisiche deuchainn fala AI againn.

If the abbreviations blur together, start with the basics: CBC looks at hemoglobin, white cells, and platelets, while BMP/CMP checks electrolytes, kidney function, and glucose. Our lab abbreviations guide helps because many hospital portals show only shorthand.

Aig mu dheidhinn Kantesti, we see the same misconception in almost every country: patients assume more testing means safer surgery. As of April 1, 2026, the evidence still favors selective testing over blanket panels for low-risk elective cases.

Why surgeons and anesthesiologists order labs at all

Doctors order pre-op labs when a result could change what happens in the operating room. The aim is not to uncover every chronic problem; the aim is to avoid a preventable anesthesia, bleeding, kidney, or infection complication today.

Gloved hands reviewing a blood sample beside anesthesia equipment in a bright pre-op room
Figear 2: Pre-op testing is meant to answer management questions, not to generate random screening data

As Thomas Klein, MD, I usually ask one blunt question before I sign off on a test: if the sodium comes back 129 mmol/L or the creatinine jumps from 0.9 to 1.8 mg/dL, what will we do differently? If the honest answer is nothing, the test is often noise.

Our physicians on the Bòrd Comhairleachaidh Meidigeach use the same logic. Creatinine can change drug dosing, potasium can change arrhythmia risk, and a positive antibody screen can slow transfusion support even when the CBC looks fine.

Lab interpretation is more nuanced than a simple red flag. Kantesti AI checks the lab's reference interval, unit system, and sample type against our dearbhadh clionaigeach framework because a creatinine of 1.3 mg/dL means something very different in a muscular 90-kg athlete than in a frail 48-kg older adult.

CBC before surgery: anemia, infection, and platelets

A CBC is the most common pre-op blood test because it detects anemia, infection patterns, and low platelets. Normal adult WBC mar as trice 4.0-11.0 x10^9/L, and normal plaidean ann 150-450 x10^9/L.

Peripheral blood smear with red cells, a white cell, and scattered platelets under a microscope
Figear 3: CBC abnormalities that matter before surgery often begin with red cells, white cells, and platelet count

What matters most is the story behind the number. A WBC of 12.5 x10^9/L with fever and cough worries me; the same value after prednisone or in a heavy smoker often does not, and our deeper white blood cell guide a’ mìneachadh an eadar-dhealachaidh sin.

Hemoglobin drives many delay decisions. Adult hemoglobin is roughly 12.0-15.5 g/dL ann am boireannaich agus 13.5–17.5 g/dL in men; elective surgery often gets a second look below 10 g/dL, and below 8 g/dL many teams pause unless the procedure is urgent, while platelet thresholds are summarized in our stiùireadh cunntais truinnsearan againn.

One trap I see every month is EDTA platelet clumping — the lab reports platelets of 38 x10^9/L, everyone panics, then a repeat in a citrate tube comes back 186. Another is chronic iron-deficiency anemia with a normal heart rate and good exercise tolerance; a stable 9.8 g/dL before minor surgery is not the same problem as a newly dropping 9.8 g/dL with black stools.

Normal adult hemoglobin Women 12.0-15.5 g/dL; men 13.5-17.5 g/dL Usually acceptable if stable and there are no bleeding symptoms
Mild anemia 10.0-11.9 g/dL in most adults Often triggers history, iron review, and blood-loss planning rather than automatic delay
Moderate anemia 8.0-9.9 g/dL Commonly needs surgeon and anesthesia review; urgency and symptoms matter
Severe anemia <8.0 g/dL Elective surgery is often postponed while cause and treatment are addressed

MCV and RDW can explain the anemia

A low MCV fo 80 fL suggests iron deficiency or thalassemia trait, while a high RDW os cionn 14.5% nudges us toward mixed deficiency or recent blood loss. That backstory often tells us whether the surgeon can proceed and treat later, or whether the anemia needs workup first.

BMP or CMP: kidney function, electrolytes, and glucose

A BMP no CMP is ordered to catch kidney dysfunction, electrolyte problems, and glucose issues that can destabilize anesthesia. Normal sodium tha 135-145 mmol/L, àbhaisteach potasium tha 3.5-5.0 mmol/L, and an eGFR of 60 mL/min/1.73 m² or higher is generally reassuring.

Serum tubes beside a chemistry analyzer with a focus on separated serum and sample cups
Figear 4: Chemistry panels help assess hydration, kidney reserve, glucose control, and electrolyte safety

I pay less attention to an isolated BUN than most patients expect. A BUN of 28 mg/dL with normal creatinine may simply reflect dehydration, which is why our BUN interpretation guide pairs it with hydration status rather than treating it as kidney failure by itself.

Creatinine and eGFR change anesthetic planning because impaired kidneys clear drugs more slowly and tolerate hypotension poorly. Our stiùireadh eGFR againn explains why a creatinine that looks normal can still hide reduced kidney reserve in older adults or people with low muscle mass; some European labs now flag eGFR below 90 earlier, but most perioperative decisions pivot more sharply when eGFR falls below 60 or especially below 30.

Glucose deserves its own line item. A fasting glucose of 70-99 mg/dL is normal, 100-125 mg/dL suggests impaired fasting glucose, and HbA1c 6.5% or higher supports diabetes; some orthopedic and vascular programs start delaying elective surgery around 8.0-8.5%, as we discuss in our HbA1c range guide, and patients on luchd-bacadh SGLT2 may need a medication hold even when the sugar looks decent.

HbA1c àbhaisteach <5.7% No diabetes by HbA1c criteria
Prediabetes range 5.7-6.4% Not usually a reason to delay surgery by itself, but worth follow-up
Diabetes range 6.5-7.9% Requires perioperative glucose planning, especially with insulin or steroids
Optimization concern ≥8.0-8.5% Some elective programs postpone until control improves

PT/INR and aPTT: who really needs clotting tests?

Routine clotting tests are usually chan eil needed for everyone. INR is normally 0.8-1.2 in people not taking warfarin, and an unexplained aPTT above the lab range deserves context before anyone talks about cancellation.

Blue-top citrate tube and a fresh fibrin clot model used to explain coagulation testing
Figear 5: Clotting studies matter most when bleeding history, anticoagulants, or liver disease are in play

A PT/INR is most useful when you take warfarin, have liver disease, have a strong bleeding history, or are headed for surgery where even modest bleeding matters. Our stiùireadh PT/INR againn covers the common thresholds; many teams want INR below 1.5 before invasive surgery, though neurosurgery may aim even tighter.

An aPTT is usually ordered when there is heparin exposure, a personal or family bleeding history, or concern about an intrinsic pathway disorder. The number is easy to overread — our aPTT and coagulation guide is helpful here because a mildly prolonged aPTT from a lupus anticoagulant may raise clotting risk rather than bleeding risk.

Here is a nuance most patient sites miss: DOACs such as apixaban and rivaroxaban are not reliably measured by standard INR. I have seen patients reassured by an INR of 1.1 even though clinically relevant anticoagulant effect was still present; timing since the last dose, kidney function, and the procedure's bleeding risk matter far more.

Normal INR 0.8-1.2 Expected in most people not taking warfarin
Mild prolongation 1.3-1.4 Often prompts medication and liver review rather than automatic delay
Common surgical concern 1.5-2.0 Many elective procedures pause until cause is clarified or corrected
Marked elevation >2.0 Usually requires urgent review, especially if surgery is not time-sensitive

Type and screen, crossmatch, and pregnancy testing

A type and screen is ordered when transfusion is reasonably possible, and a pregnancy test is ordered when the result could change anesthesia or imaging choices. These are not routine for every minor procedure, but they matter a great deal when indicated.

Blood bank sample and compatibility setup with gloved hands matching a pre-op wristband
Figear 6: Type and screen is different from simply knowing your blood group, and pregnancy testing changes management in selected patients

Knowing your blood type from a donor card is not the same as having a current hospital type and screen. The lab confirms ABO/Rh and looks for unexpected antibodies; our blood type and reticulocyte guide is a useful refresher if terms like Rh-negative no alloantibody feel fuzzy.

A positive antibody screen can delay blood availability by hours because the blood bank may need to find compatible units and perform extra matching. If you want the pre-op vocabulary decoded, our stiùireadh bith-chomharran helps patients distinguish screen, crossmatch, agus antigen without getting lost in jargon.

Pregnancy testing is usually urine or serum hCG, and many hospital assays turn positive around 20-25 mIU/mL. A positive result does not automatically cancel urgent surgery, but it can change fluoroscopy shielding, medication choices, and the conversation about timing; if you were transfused or pregnant within the prior 3 mìosan, some hospitals require a fresh type and screen within 72 uair a thìde.

Targeted tests that are sometimes added

Targeted tests are added only when history points that way. The most common extras are ferritin no sgrùdaidhean iarainn, liver tests, albumin, deuchainnean tìoroide, agus uaireannan urinalysis.

Liver anatomy illustration beside iron-related samples and a urine specimen cup in a lab setting
Figear 7: Some surgeries call for extra tests when the medical history suggests anemia, liver disease, or urinary concerns

Iron status is the hidden pre-op issue I wish more patients knew about. A ferritin fo 30 ng/mL strongly suggests iron deficiency in most adults, and our ferritin range guide matters here because patients can have normal hemoglobin today yet still drift into postoperative anemia after a high-blood-loss operation.

Liver tests are usually selective, not routine. ALT is commonly reported as normal around 7-56 U/L, total bilirubin around 0.1-1.2 mg/dL, agus albumin below 3.0 g/dL raises my concern more than a mild isolated ALT bump because low albumin tracks with poor wound healing and frailty; our stiùireadh ALT unpacks the difference.

Urinalysis is another overused test. For most non-urologic surgery, asymptomatic bacteriuria on a screening urine sample is not a good reason to delay or give antibiotics, which is why I point readers to our iùl urinalysis before they panic over a few leukocytes or trace bacteria; mild thyroid lab abnormalities behave similarly — context beats reflex cancellation.

When pre-op blood work can be safely skipped

Pre-op blood work can often be skipped in healthy adults having low-risk surgery. That includes many cataract, dermatologic, endoscopy, and minor ambulatory procedures when history and examination are reassuring.

Outpatient surgical prep area with an unused blood draw kit and an empty phlebotomy chair
Figear 8: Skipping tests can be evidence-based when a patient is healthy and the procedure is low risk

This is where old habits die hard. Patients frequently upload years of old lab PDFs to Kantesti AI after being told no repeat blood work is needed, and the surprise is usually that the surgeon is following evidence, not cutting corners.

NICE NG45 and the ASA approach both moved away from age-based routine testing years ago. The classic New England Journal of Medicine cataract surgery trial found no meaningful reduction in perioperative events from routine testing, and the later Cochrane review landed in essentially the same place for low-risk eye surgery.

But skipped does not mean ignored. A person with CKD stage 3, insulin-treated diabetes, heavy anticoagulant use, or a history of transfusion reactions can need labs for even a modest procedure, while a healthy 29-year-old having a 20-minute superficial operation may need none.

Which abnormal results can delay an elective procedure?

Elective surgery is most often delayed by results that signal unstable anemia, active infection, major clotting risk, dangerous electrolytes, or poorly controlled diabetes. In day-to-day practice, the repeat test is sometimes as important as the abnormal one.

Abnormal pre-op sample retesting setup with a repeat chemistry tube and bedside analyzer
Figear 9: Some abnormal pre-op results truly delay surgery, while others need a careful repeat before anyone panics

Common tripwires are hemoglobin fo 8 g/dL, platelets below 50 x10^9/L, INR 1.5 or higher when not expected, potassium below 3.0 or above 5.5 mmol/L, sodium below 130 mmol/L, and day-of-surgery glucose above 250 mg/dL. Tha WBC above 15 x10^9/L with fever or new symptoms often pushes us to look for infection before proceeding.

The thing is, not every scary result is real. A hemolyzed sample can falsely raise potassium into the 5.8-6.2 mmol/L range, and a rushed repeat often normalizes — our stiùireadh mu àm na deuchainn-lann againn explains why repeat chemistry can come back within an hour while a crossmatch takes longer.

Across the 2M+ reports uploaded to Kantesti from 127+ countries, the most common misunderstanding is confusing a lab reference flag with a surgical stop sign. Our result translation guide helps patients separate mildly abnormal numbers from the findings that truly change anesthesia, and that distinction avoids a lot of sleepless nights.

Normal platelets 150-450 x10^9/L Adequate for most procedures if function is normal
Thrombocytopenia tlàth 100-149 x10^9/L Often acceptable, depending on the operation and bleeding history
Moderate thrombocytopenia 50-99 x10^9/L May limit neuraxial anesthesia or higher-bleeding-risk surgery
High-delay range <50 x10^9/L Elective surgery is commonly postponed while cause and plan are clarified

False alarms worth repeating

Three repeat-worthy culprits are hemolysis, EDTA platelet clumping, agus tourniquet-related hemoconcentration. In practice, repeating the sample before canceling a case can save a patient a lost workday, a missed operation slot, and a lot of unnecessary fear.

What blood tests should I ask for, and how do I understand the results?

The best question is not what blood tests should I get; it is which test would change management for my surgery. If no result would alter timing, bleeding preparation, medication choice, or anesthesia plan, extra blood work usually adds cost more than safety.

Patient hands comparing pre-op sample tubes and prior lab papers at a bright table
Figear 10: Understanding pre-op results starts with context: procedure type, medications, trends, and personal baseline

As Thomas Klein, MD, I tell patients not to ask for every panel under the sun. Bring a medication list, prior abnormal labs, and the name of the procedure instead; if you already have results and want a plain-language review before that appointment, you can upload them to our free lab review, and most patients get a readable summary in about 60 diog.

Preparation matters more than people realize. Most CBCs and many BMP/CMP panels do chan eil require fasting, but glucose or lipid testing sometimes does, so check the exact order and read our stiùireadh mu luaths before you skip water or morning medicines.

To understand the numbers, compare the current result with your own baseline, not just the lab's red box. Kantesti AI explains trend direction, reference variation, and medication context using the framework we outline in our iùl teicneòlais.

And if you want the physician-style logic behind mar a leughas toraidhean deuchainn fala, start with our complete lab reading guide. In clinic, that is usually where fear turns into a concrete plan.

Foillseachaidhean rannsachaidh agus leughadh a bharrachd

These two publications give added context on blood-based diagnostics that occasionally intersect with perioperative evaluation. They are not standard pre-op ordering guides, but they are useful references for broader lab literacy.

Physician-reviewed research papers, a blood sample, and a laptop on a birch laboratory desk
Figear 11: Formal references help readers place surgical blood testing in the wider diagnostic literature

Kantesti AI Research Team. (2026). Nipah virus blood test: Early detection & diagnosis guide 2026. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18487418. A searchable ResearchGate version is also available. An Academia.edu listing can be useful for literature tracking.

Kantesti AI Research Team. (2026). B negative blood type, LDH blood test & reticulocyte count guide. Figshare. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.31333819. A searchable ResearchGate version is also available. An Academia.edu listing can be useful for literature tracking.

If a pre-op result is unusual and you need physician-reviewed context, send it through your own care team first, then cuir fios chun sgioba againn if you want help understanding the report language. We update this section when new blood-testing references are directly relevant to patients preparing for surgery.

Ceistean Bitheanta

A bheil feum aig a h-uile euslainteach air deuchainn fala mus tèid iad fo obair-lannsa?

Chan fheum inbhich fallain, le lannsaireachd bheag le cunnart ìosal, obair fala ro-lannsaireachd gu tric ma tha an eachdraidh agus an sgrùdadh gun lorg. Tha cunntas fala slàn (CBC) no pannal ceimigeachd nas dualtaiche nuair a tha tinneas dubhaig, tinneas an t-siùcair, anemia, cleachdadh anticoagulant, no call fala ris an robh dùil. Mar as trice tha seòrsa is sgrìonadh (type and screen) glèidhte airson modhan far a bheil cothrom reusanta ann gum bi feum air tar-chur fala.

Dè na deuchainnean fala a bu chòir dhomh fhaighinn mus tèid anesthesia coitcheann a dhèanamh?

Chan eil liosta uile-choitcheann ann airson gach euslainteach fo anesthesia coitcheann. ’S e na deuchainnean as cumanta, nuair a tha iad iomchaidh, cunntas fala slàn (CBC), BMP no CMP, creatinine agus electrolytes, glùcois, agus uaireannan PT/INR, aPTT, seòrsa is sgrìonadh, no deuchainn torrachais. Tha cudrom air a’ mhodh fhèin: is dòcha nach fheum obair-lannsa ghoirid uachdarach deuchainnean, ach gu tric bidh feum air barrachd dealbhaidh airson lannsaireachd mhòr bhoilg no lannsaireachd orthopédic. ’S e an ceist as fheàrr ri faighneachd dè an toradh a bhiodh ag atharrachadh a’ phlana anesthesia no lannsaireachd.

An urrainn do hemoglobin ìosal obair-lannsa a chur dheth?

Tha, ach chan eil an stairsneach an aon rud anns gach cùis. Bidh hemoglobin fo 8 g/dL gu tric a’ cur dàil air dòigh-obrach no a’ brosnachadh còmhradh èiginneach airson lannsaireachd roghnach, fhad ’s a dh’ fhaodadh anemia cronail seasmhach anns an raon 9–10 g/dL fhathast a bhith iomchaidh airson modhan le call fala nas ìsle. Tha comharraidhean gu math cudromach: tha pian broilleach, giorrad analach, stòl dubh, no hemoglobin a’ tuiteam gu luath nas draghail na anemia tlàth a tha air a bhith ann fad ùine. Bidh lannsairean cuideachd a’ tomhas an call fala ris a bheil dùil, tinneas cridhe, agus an urrainn do làimhseachadh iarainn an àireamh a leasachadh an toiseach.

A bheil feum agam air fastadh mus dèan mi obair-fala ro-obrachaidh?

Mar as trice chan ann airson CBC, agus gu tric chan ann airson BMP no CMP àbhaisteach. Tha feum air fastadh nas trice nuair a tha an t-òrdugh a’ gabhail a-steach glùcois fastachd no pannal lipid, agus mar as trice tha an uinneag fastachd 8–12 uairean a rèir an obair-lann. Mar as trice tha cead uisge a bhith ann agus gu tric tha e feumail, oir faodaidh dìth uisge BUN a thogail gu meallta agus am fuil-tharraing a dhèanamh nas duilghe. Faighnich gu sònraichte mu chungaidhean sa mhadainn, gu h-àraidh insulin, tablaidean airson tinneas an t-siùcair, agus luchd-fuil a’ caolachadh.

Dè cho ùr ’s a bu chòir do dheuchainnean ro-obrachaidh a bhith?

Bidh mòran ospadalan a’ gabhail ri toraidhean CBC seasmhach agus ceimigeachd a chaidh a tharraing taobh a-staigh 30 latha airson lannsaireachd roghnach, ged a bhios cuid a’ gabhail ri uinneagan nas fhaide nuair nach eil suidheachaidhean cronail air atharrachadh. Tha “type and screen” eadar-dhealaichte: ma bha thu trom no ma fhuair thu tar-chuir fala taobh a-staigh nan 3 mìosan roimhe, bidh mòran bhancaichean fala ag iarraidh sampall a chaidh a chruinneachadh taobh a-staigh 72 uairean. Faodar deuchainn glùcois air latha na lannsaireachd a chur ris fhathast airson tinneas an t-siùcair eadhon nuair a tha deuchainnean oifis-lighiche o chionn ghoirid ann. Bidh poileasaidh ionadail, an obair-lannsa, agus do eachdraidh mheidigeach a’ dearbhadh an dearbh àm.

Dè na toraidhean deuchainn obair-lann neo-àbhaisteach a bhios a’ cur dàil air lannsaireachd as trice?

Bidh na dàil as cumanta a’ tighinn bho anemia trom, neo-riaghailteachdan mòra ann an electrolytes, tinneas an t-siùcair nach eil fo smachd, duilgheadasan clotting ris nach robh dùil, galar gnìomhach, agus leòn dubhaig acrach. Ann an cleachdadh, bidh lighichean gu tric a’ stad lannsaireachd roghnach nuair a tha hemoglobin fo 8 g/dL, nuair a tha plaidean fo 50 x10^9/L, nuair a tha INR aig 1.5 no nas àirde, nuair a tha potasium fo 3.0 no os cionn 5.5 mmol/L, no nuair a tha glucose os cionn 250 mg/dL air latha na lannsaireachd. Bidh fiabhras còmhla ri cunntas geal os cionn 15 x10^9/L cuideachd a’ togail dragh mu ghalar. Uaireannan ’s e sampall ath-aithris an ath cheum as glic, oir faodaidh hemolysis agus cruinneachadh plaidean rabhaidhean meallta a chruthachadh.

Dè na deuchainnean fala a bu chòir dhomh iarraidh ma cha do dh’òrduich an lannsair agam gin sam bith?

Na iarr pannal mòr gu bunaiteach. Faighnich am biodh CBC, pannal ceimigeachd, INR, seòrsa is sgrìonadh, no deuchainn torrachais ag atharrachadh an làimhseachaidh airson a’ mhodh-obrach shònraichte agad, na cungaidhean agad, no na tinneasan leantainneach agad. Ma tha am freagairt “chan eil”, ’s e roghainn stèidhichte air stiùireadh a th’ ann an deuchainnean a sheachnadh gu tric seach mearachd. Mar as trice tha e nas fheumaile na bhith ag iarraidh barrachd obair-fala leat fhèin: a bhith a’ toirt leabhrain deuchainnean fala roimhe a bha neo-àbhaisteach, liosta nan cungaidhean, agus an dearbh ainm an lannsaireachd.

Faigh Mion-sgrùdadh Deuchainn Fala le Cumhachd AI an-diugh

Thig còmhla ri còrr is 2 mhillean neach air feadh an t-saoghail a tha a’ earbsa Kantesti airson mion-sgrùdadh sa bhad, ceart air deuchainnean obair-lann. Luchdaich suas na toraidhean deuchainn fala agad agus faigh mìneachadh coileanta air biomarcair 15,000+ ann an diogan.

📚 Foillseachaidhean Rannsachaidh le Iomraidhean

1

Klein, T., Mitchell, S., & Weber, H. (2026). Deuchainn Fuil Bhìoras Nipah: Stiùireadh airson Lorg is Breithneachadh Tràth 2026. Rannsachadh Leigheis AI Kantesti.

2

Klein, T., Mitchell, S., & Weber, H. (2026). Stuth fala B àicheil, stiùireadh deuchainn fala LDH & cunntas reticulocyte. Rannsachadh Leigheis AI Kantesti.

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Eòlas

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Eòlas

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Ùghdarrasachd

Air a sgrìobhadh le Dr. Thomas Klein le ath-sgrùdadh le Dr. Sarah Mitchell agus Prof. Dr. Hans Weber.

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Le Prof. Dr. Thomas Klein

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Cha dèid an seòladh puist-dhealain agad fhoillseachadh. Tha * ris na raointean a tha riatanach