Pathology / Laboratory Report Details
Case: Case #1
| Patient: Eddy
| Date | 06/06/2026 |
|---|---|
| Laboratory | Idexx |
| Type | Biochemistry |
| Title | Pre GA |
| Source / File Reference | Open uploaded file |
Extraction Status: Extraction complete
| Date: 06/06/2026 05:05
DAMNIT-V Pathology Evidence Extraction
Physical Evidence Summary
- MCHC (Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration): 30.9 g/dL (Low; RI 32.0 - 37.9)
- Platelets (PLT): 679 K/µL (High; RI 148 - 484)
- PCT (Plateletcrit): 0.71 % (High; RI 0.14 - 0.46)
- Creatinine (CREA): 230 µmol/L (High; RI 44 - 159)
- Urea: 12.4 mmol/L (High; RI 2.5 - 9.6)
- ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase): 221 U/L (High; RI 10 - 125)
- SDMA: 9 µg/dL (Normal; RI 0 - 14)
- Other CBC parameters (RBC, HCT, HGB, MCV, MCH, RDW, WBC, NEU, LYM, MONO, EOS, BASO) within normal limits.
Affected Systems
- Hematologic system: low MCHC, high platelet count and plateletcrit.
- Renal system: elevated creatinine and urea.
- Hepatic system: elevated ALT.
- No significant abnormalities in white blood cell counts or differential.
DAMNIT-V Domain Mapping
- M (Metabolic / nutritional / endocrine / renal / hepatic / biochemical burden): Elevated CREA and UREA indicate renal involvement; elevated ALT indicates hepatic involvement.
- I (Inflammatory / infectious / immune-associated evidence): Elevated platelets and plateletcrit may indicate inflammation or reactive thrombocytosis.
- N (Neoplastic / proliferative): No direct evidence.
- D (Degenerative / chronic structural): Possible chronic renal changes suggested by CREA and UREA elevation.
- T, V, A: No direct evidence.
Conventional Flags
- Low MCHC: may indicate hypochromia, possibly related to iron deficiency or chronic disease.
- High platelets and PCT: reactive thrombocytosis or inflammation.
- High creatinine and urea: azotemia, possible renal dysfunction.
- High ALT: hepatocellular injury or leakage.
- Normal SDMA: suggests early or mild renal impairment or non-renal causes of creatinine elevation.
Snapshot Evidence
- Hematology: Mild hypochromia (low MCHC), thrombocytosis.
- Biochemistry: Azotemia (high CREA and UREA), elevated liver enzyme (ALT).
- No leukocytosis or left shift to suggest acute infection.
- SDMA normal, suggesting renal function may be stable or early dysfunction.
- Platelet parameters elevated, possibly indicating inflammatory or reactive process.
This evidence supports renal and hepatic system involvement with possible inflammatory component; hematologic changes are mild and may be secondary. Further renal function tests and urinalysis recommended for comprehensive assessment.
Raw Extracted Text
Physical Evidence Summary:
- MCHC (Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration): 30.9 g/dL (Low; RI 32.0 - 37.9)
- Platelets (PLT): 679 K/µL (High; RI 148 - 484)
- PCT (Plateletcrit): 0.71 % (High; RI 0.14 - 0.46)
- Creatinine (CREA): 230 µmol/L (High; RI 44 - 159)
- Urea: 12.4 mmol/L (High; RI 2.5 - 9.6)
- ALT (Alanine Aminotransferase): 221 U/L (High; RI 10 - 125)
- SDMA: 9 µg/dL (Normal; RI 0 - 14)
- Other CBC parameters (RBC, HCT, HGB, MCV, MCH, RDW, WBC, NEU, LYM, MONO, EOS, BASO) within normal limits.
Affected Systems:
- Hematologic system: low MCHC, high platelet count and plateletcrit.
- Renal system: elevated creatinine and urea.
- Hepatic system: elevated ALT.
- No significant abnormalities in white blood cell counts or differential.
Likely DAMNIT-V Domains:
- M (Metabolic / nutritional / endocrine / renal / hepatic / biochemical burden): Elevated CREA and UREA indicate renal involvement; elevated ALT indicates hepatic involvement.
- I (Inflammatory / infectious / immune-associated evidence): Elevated platelets and plateletcrit may indicate inflammation or reactive thrombocytosis.
- N (Neoplastic / proliferative): No direct evidence.
- D (Degenerative / chronic structural): Possible chronic renal changes suggested by CREA and UREA elevation.
- T, V, A: No direct evidence.
Conventional Flags:
- Low MCHC: may indicate hypochromia, possibly related to iron deficiency or chronic disease.
- High platelets and PCT: reactive thrombocytosis or inflammation.
- High creatinine and urea: azotemia, possible renal dysfunction.
- High ALT: hepatocellular injury or leakage.
- Normal SDMA: suggests early or mild renal impairment or non-renal causes of creatinine elevation.
Snapshot Evidence:
- Hematology: Mild hypochromia (low MCHC), thrombocytosis.
- Biochemistry: Azotemia (high CREA and UREA), elevated liver enzyme (ALT).
- No leukocytosis or left shift to suggest acute infection.
- SDMA normal, suggesting renal function may be stable or early dysfunction.
- Platelet parameters elevated, possibly indicating inflammatory or reactive process.
This evidence supports renal and hepatic system involvement with possible inflammatory component; hematologic changes are mild and may be secondary. Further renal function tests and urinalysis recommended for comprehensive assessment.