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I went to have my medical check-up with my husband weeks ago, n i got the results yesterday.some of the things I'm not quite get it:

(my result) (husband's)
HBsAg (negative) (Negative)
Anti-HBs (negative) (Positive)
HBeAg (negative) (Negative)
Anti-HBe (negative) (Positive)
Anti-HBc (negative) (Positive)

What's the results indicated??
What's the meaning of all those short-form terms??
what's all those positive /negative means??
Is positive better or negative??Can you tell me the difference?

ne more thing is what is lym%??
If the result i got is higher than the reference value, what's that indicated?? i.e: 47% (reference:20-40%)

2006-10-13 15:55:41 · 2 answers · asked by joan1214 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Other - Diseases

2 answers

First of all - didn't you ask your doctor about this?

HBsAg = Hepatitis B surface antigen - you don't have the protein found in the surface of the hepatitis B virus

anti-HBs = not sure, but I assume it tests for antibodies to the surface antigen (above) and you are negative, but your husband has the antibody - meaning he was at one time exposed to the hepatitis B virus

HBeAg = hepatitis B e antigen - another protein found on/in the hepatitis B virus - you don't have this

anti-HBe = again, I assume this is testing for the antibody (your body's defense against) the e antigen on the heptatis virus - it looks, again, like your husband has been exposed to the virus, but you have not, and therefore you have not developed antibodies against the virus or its components like your husband has.

anti-HBc = I assume this is testing for antibody against the core (c) antigen of the hepatitis virus - you appear to never have been infected with Hepatitis B, while your husband has been, if I'm interpreting the data correctly.

Basically, the end result is that you appear to never have been infected or exposed to the hepatitis B virus. Your husband appears to have been infected at one time with hepatitis B, but I don't believe he is currently infected (but I'm not an expert). Hepatitis B is a largely blood born infection, and many people in the health care field are immunized against it - actually, all newborns are now immunized against it as well.

I'm not sure what you mean by lym%.

Good luck! The results appear good for both you and your husband.

2006-10-13 16:17:02 · answer #1 · answered by Wondering 3 · 0 0

bp is Little low 36 should be at lest 50 normal bp is about 120/70 pulse Little high should be 70 to 99

2016-03-28 08:22:12 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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