Calculation
To calculate MCV, the hematocrit (Hct) is divided by the concentration of RBCs ( BC Normally, MCV is expressed in femtoliters ( fL, or 10−15 L), and BCin millions per microliter (106 / μL). The normal range for MCV is 80–100 fL. If the hematocrit is expressed as a percentage, the red blood cell concentration as millions per microliter, and the MCV in femtoliters, the formula becomes For example, if the Hct = 42.5% and BC= 4.58 million per microliter (4,580,000/μL), then Using implied units, The MCV can be determined in a number of ways by automatic analyzers. In volume-sensitive automated blood cell counters, such as the Coulter counter, the red cells pass one-by-one through a small aperture and generate a signal directly proportional to their volume. Other automated counters measure red blood cell volume by means of techniques that measure refracted, diffracted, or scattered light.Interpretation
The normal reference range is typically 80-100 fL.High
In pernicious anemia (macrocytic), MCV can range up to 150 femtolitres. (as are an elevated GGT and an AST/ALT ratio of 2:1). Vitamin B12 and/or folic acid deficiency has also been associated with macrocytic anemia (high MCV numbers).Low
The most common causes of microcytic anemia are iron deficiency (due to inadequate dietary intake, gastrointestinal blood loss, or menstrual blood loss), thalassemia, sideroblastic anemia or chronic disease. In iron deficiency anemia (microcytic anemia), it can be as low as 60 to 70 femtolitres. In some cases of thalassemia, the MCV may be low even though the patient is not iron deficient.Worked example
Derivation
The MCV can be conceptualized as the total volume of a group of cells divided by the number of cells. For a real world sized example, imagine you had 10 small jellybeans with a combined volume of 10 μL. The mean volume of a jellybean in this group would be 10 μL / 10 jellybeans = 1 μL / jellybean. A similar calculation works for MCV. 1. Measure the RBC index in cells/μL. Take the reciprocal (1/RBC index) to convert it to μL/cell. : 2. The 1 μL is only made of a proportion of red cells (e.g. 40%) with the rest of the volume composed of plasma. Multiply by the hematocrit (a unitless quantity) to take this into account. : 3. Finally, convert the units of μL to fL by multiplying by . The result would look like this: : Note: the shortcut proposed above just makes the units work out:References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mean Corpuscular Volume Blood tests