A plain-language, educational guide to what a blood test shows — what a CBC and a basic metabolic panel measure, how reference ranges work, and what an "out of range" result generally means.
Most routine blood draws include one or both of these:
A CBC looks at the cells in your blood: red blood cells (which carry oxygen — often summarised by hemoglobin and hematocrit), white blood cells (part of your immune defence), and platelets (which help blood clot). It is one of the most frequently ordered tests.
A metabolic panel measures chemistry in the fluid part of your blood — for example glucose (blood sugar), electrolytes such as sodium and potassium, and markers related to kidney function (e.g. creatinine). A comprehensive panel adds liver-related markers and proteins.
A typical lab report has a few columns next to each marker:
A reference range is usually defined so that about 95% of healthy people fall inside it. By design, a small share of perfectly healthy people sit just outside. Ranges differ between laboratories and depend on factors such as age and sex — which is exactly why you should read your result against the range printed on your report, not a number you found online.
An out-of-range value is a signal to look closer, not a diagnosis. A result can fall outside the range for many ordinary reasons:
Clinicians interpret a result in context — alongside your symptoms, history, physical exam, trends over time, and other markers. A single flagged value, especially one only slightly outside the range, is often not concerning on its own.
See our companion page on common markers with widely-accepted reference ranges, each cited to an authoritative medical source.