Complete Diagnostics
Complete Diagostics Laboratory - medical clinic
Hematology
also spelled haematology, is the branch of internal medicine, physiology, pathology, clinical laboratory work, and pediatrics that is concerned with the study of blood, the blood-forming organs, and blood diseases. Hematology includes the study of etiology, diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and prevention of blood diseases. The laboratology work that goes into the study of blood is frequently performed by a medical technologist. Hematologists physicians also very frequently do further study in oncology - the medical treatment of cancer.
Blood Chemistry
Doctors order basic blood chemistry tests to assess a wide range of conditions and the function of organs.
Often, blood tests check electrolytes, the minerals that help keep the body's fluid levels in balance, and are necessary to help the muscles, heart, and other organs work properly. To assess kidney function and blood sugar, blood tests measure other substances.
Serology
The analysis of the properties and effects of serums (blood, semen, saliva, sweat, or fecal matter) is called serology. We'll concentrate here on the principal tests used to identify blood. According to Henry C. Lee, a forensics expert who has assisted law enforcement in over 6,000 major criminal investigations—including that of O. J. Simpson---blood evidence is found most often in "crimes of violence such as homicide, assault, and sexual assault." It may be in the form of fresh liquid, coagulated, dried, or as a small drop or stain, and each form involves a different method of preservation and collection.
We all have about ten pints of blood getting pumped throughout our bodies. When wounded, bodies leak or spray blood, and the behavior of blood in flight tends to be unaffected by such things as temperature, humidity, or atmospheric pressure. In other words, it's uniform.
Despite how well the crime scene may get cleaned up, even the finest trace of blood can often be detected and further tested. It is often the case that while the perpetrator may scrub down the obvious places, he can still miss between floorboards, under pipes, and inside drains. Merely by pouring water on some tiles at a murder scene and pulling them up wherever the water flowed beneath them, one detective found the only existing trace of the crime--blood. His discovery so surprised the killer, who felt certain he'd done a through job of cleaning up, that he instantly confessed.
- Clinical Microscopy
- Tumor Markers
- Immunochemistry
- Drug Testing
EXECUTIVE PACKAGES
BASIC BLOOD CHEMISTRY PANEL
FBS
Creatinine
Lipid Profile
- Total Cholesterol
- Triglycerides
- High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
- Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL)
SGOT
SGPT
BUA
BUN
DIABETIC PANEL
FBS
Potassium
Creatinine
HBa1c
Lipid Profile
- Total Cholesterol
- Triglycerides
- High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
- Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL)
CARDIAC RISK EVALUATION
FBS
Lipid Profile
- Total Cholesterol
- Triglycerides
- High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
- Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL)
hscrp
ECG
HYPERTENSIVE PANEL
CBC
Potassium
Calcium
FBS
Creatinine
Lipid Profile
- Total Cholesterol
- Triglycerides
- High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
- Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL)
BUA
ECG
LIVER PANEL
SGOT Optional:
SGPT HBT Ultrasound
Alk. Phos
Billrubin
TPAG
HBsAg (Hepa B Screening)
KIDNEY PANEL
BUA Optional:
BUN KUB Ultrasound
Creatinine
Potassium
Urine
SPEC 23
FBS
Creatinine
Lipid Profile
- Total Cholesterol
- Triglycerides
- High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
- Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL)
Billrubin
Sodium
Potassium
Chloride
SGPT
SGOT
Alk. Phosphatase
BUA
BUN
TPAG
Phosphorus
LDH
Amylase
GGTP
CPK