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Also reported in: µg/L
Your urinary thallium is in the normal range, indicating no significant thallium exposure. Normal background environmental levels are not a health concern.
No measurable thallium was found in your urine. Thallium is an very toxic heavy metal with no normal biological role. An undetectable level is ideal and expected for most people.
No action needed.
Urine thallium undetectable — no thallium exposureYour urinary thallium is within the normal reference range. Trace thallium can be detectable in some individuals due to background environmental exposure. This level is not associated with adverse health effects.
No action needed.
Urine thallium within reference range — no evidence of significant thallium exposureA very small amount of thallium is detectable, consistent with background environmental exposure. This is within the expected range and does not indicate toxic exposure.
No action needed.
Urine thallium: low-normal — trace background exposure onlyYour urinary thallium is in the normal range, indicating no significant thallium exposure. Normal background environmental levels are not a health concern.
No specific action required.
Urine thallium within acceptable reference rangeYour thallium level is in the optimal range, reflecting essentially no thallium exposure. This is the best possible result for this very toxic element.
No action needed.
Urine thallium: optimal — no detectable thallium burdenYour urinary thallium is above the reference range. Thallium is found in coal combustion byproducts, certain cement plants, some soils, and can enter the food supply. Even borderline elevations warrant investigation as thallium is one of the most toxic heavy metals, affecting the nervous system, hair follicles, and kidneys.
Identify the exposure source immediately — assess diet, water supply, and occupational environment. Seek medical evaluation. Retest promptly.
Urine thallium 1.0–5.0 mcg/L — borderline elevated; above reference rangeYour urinary thallium is significantly elevated, indicating meaningful thallium exposure. Thallium poisoning causes alopecia (hair loss), peripheral neuropathy with noticeable pain and numbness, encephalopathy, and damage to the heart, kidneys, and lungs. Symptoms can appear days after exposure.
Seek urgent medical evaluation immediately. Thallium exposure source must be identified and eliminated at once. Prussian Blue (ferric ferrocyanide) is the antidote and must be given under medical supervision.
Urine thallium >5.0 mcg/L — elevated; significant thallium toxicity riskYour urinary thallium is critically elevated, consistent with acute thallium poisoning. Thallium is considered one of the most toxic heavy metals, with potentially fatal outcomes at high doses. noticeable poisoning causes progressive neurological failure, multi-organ damage, respiratory failure, and death if untreated.
This is a life-threatening medical emergency. Call emergency services immediately. Prussian Blue antidote and intensive supportive care must be administered urgently. Toxicology consultation is critical.
Urine thallium >20 mcg/L — critical; acute thallium poisoningUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.