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Your serum immunofixation is negative for monoclonal gammopathy. This is the expected normal result, ruling out a paraprotein in the blood.
Serum immunofixation is negative, meaning no monoclonal immunoglobulin (M-protein) was detected in your blood. This is the normal finding.
Reassuring result. No action needed.
Serum immunofixation: negative — no monoclonal protein detectedSerum immunofixation is negative for monoclonal immunoglobulins. No M-spike is present.
No action needed.
Serum immunofixation: negative — no monoclonal protein detectedYour serum immunofixation is negative for monoclonal gammopathy. This is the expected normal result, ruling out a paraprotein in the blood.
No action needed. Reassuring result.
Serum immunofixation: negative — no monoclonal protein detectedSerum immunofixation is negative, which is the optimal finding. No monoclonal immunoglobulin is present.
No action needed.
Serum immunofixation: negative — no monoclonal protein detectedA faint or equivocal band was detected on immunofixation. This may represent a very low level monoclonal protein or a technical artifact. Repeat testing or more sensitive methods (serum free light chains) may clarify.
Discuss with your doctor. Repeat immunofixation or serum free light chain analysis may be recommended.
Serum immunofixation: weak positive — very low level monoclonal proteinSerum immunofixation is positive, meaning a monoclonal immunoglobulin (M-protein) is present. This can indicate MGUS (monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance), multiple myeloma, Waldenström's macroglobulinemia, or AL amyloidosis.
See your doctor immediately. Hematology consultation, quantitative immunoglobulins, serum free light chains, and further investigations are needed to determine the significance.
Serum immunofixation: positive — monoclonal protein detectedA strongly positive immunofixation with a prominent monoclonal band indicates a significant paraprotein. This suggests an underlying plasma cell or lymphoproliferative disorder requiring urgent diagnosis.
Seek prompt hematology evaluation. Full workup including bone marrow biopsy, skeletal survey, serum free light chains, and baseline organ function assessment is needed.
Serum immunofixation: strongly positive — significant monoclonal protein detectedUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.