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Your A/G ratio is in the normal range, indicating a healthy balance between albumin and globulin proteins in your blood.
A very low A/G ratio means globulins far outnumber albumin — most commonly from advanced liver disease, multiple myeloma, or noticeable chronic infection. The normal protein balance of the blood is very disrupted.
Seek urgent medical evaluation. This finding needs investigation into liver function and blood protein disorders.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — very low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A low A/G ratio occurs when albumin is reduced (liver disease, malnutrition) or globulins are elevated (chronic infection, inflammation, autoimmune disease, or blood disorders). Either finding warrants investigation.
Your doctor should look at albumin and globulin separately and investigate the cause of the imbalance.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — below reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A borderline low A/G ratio suggests mild elevation in immune proteins or slight reduction in albumin. It is a useful signal to review alongside individual albumin and globulin values.
Discuss with your doctor at your next visit. Usually not an emergency in isolation.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — borderline lowYour A/G ratio is in the normal range, indicating a healthy balance between albumin and globulin proteins in your blood.
No action needed.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — within reference rangeYour protein ratio sits in the healthy midrange, reflecting well-nourished albumin levels and appropriate globulin levels — a good indicator of overall protein health.
Excellent result. No action needed.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — optimalA borderline high A/G ratio usually means globulins are on the low side, which can reflect low immune activity. It can also simply reflect dehydration elevating albumin.
Usually not clinically significant. Ensure good hydration before future tests.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — borderline highA high A/G ratio most commonly results from very low globulin levels (hypoimmunoglobulinemia), which can indicate an immune deficiency. It can also reflect dehydration or a lab result from very high albumin.
Your doctor should check immunoglobulin levels to assess for immune deficiency.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — above reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A very high A/G ratio most likely reflects near-absent globulins — indicating a noticeable immune deficiency. This is rare and requires urgent immunological evaluation.
Seek urgent medical evaluation. Immunoglobulin levels need urgent measurement.
A/G Ratio: {{value}} — very high (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.