Protein Total

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Protein Total
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Protein Total, in Visit Clinic

Measures total blood protein (albumin and globulins) to assess nutrition, liver and kidney function, and immune status in Visit Clinic.

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centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Protein Total Test in Visit Clinic?

The Total Protein test measures the combined level of albumin and globulins in your blood. Albumin helps keep fluid in blood vessels and carries small molecules. Globulins include antibodies and other proteins that fight infection. This test helps check nutrition, liver and kidney function, and immune activity. Abnormal results can point to liver disease, kidney problems, malnutrition, dehydration, chronic inflammation, or blood disorders. Doctors use it as part of routine health panels and when monitoring chronic conditions. It often prompts more specific tests if results are outside the expected range.

Protein Total Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Protein Total Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Protein Total test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Protein Total Test in Visit Clinic?

Total Protein is commonly included in a comprehensive metabolic panel or liver function panel. Doctors order it if you have fatigue, swelling, unexplained weight changes, repeated infections, or signs of liver or kidney trouble. It helps detect liver disease, kidney loss of protein, malnutrition, inflammation, or blood disorders. Results can be affected by dehydration, chronic illness, certain medicines, or poor diet. A family history of liver, kidney, or immune disorders may make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a good total protein level in Visit Clinic?plus

A good serum total protein level is generally about 6.0–8.3 g/dL (60–83 g/L). Levels below this may suggest malnutrition, liver disease, or protein loss from the kidneys; levels above may indicate dehydration, chronic inflammation, or conditions such as multiple myeloma. Interpretation depends on symptoms and other labs, so abnormal results usually prompt further evaluation by a healthcare professional.

What happens if total protein is high in Visit Clinic?plus

High total protein (hyperproteinemia) can indicate dehydration, chronic inflammation or infections, and blood disorders like monoclonal gammopathies (for example, multiple myeloma). It may be associated with fatigue, weight loss or swelling, and usually prompts further testing. Physicians often order serum protein electrophoresis, urine protein and other blood tests to identify the cause and guide treatment. See your clinician for evaluation.

What if total protein is low in Visit Clinic?plus

Low total protein may indicate malnutrition, liver disease, kidney protein loss (e.g., nephrotic syndrome), malabsorption, or chronic inflammation. Symptoms can include fatigue, swelling (edema), poor wound healing, and more infections. Follow-up usually involves repeat tests, serum albumin, liver/kidney panels and urine protein. Treatment addresses the underlying cause, nutritional support, and specialist management as needed.

What does a total protein level of 8.5 mean in Visit Clinic?plus

A total protein of 8.5 g/dL is mildly above most reference ranges. It may reflect dehydration (concentration), elevated globulins from chronic inflammation or infection, or less commonly a monoclonal gammopathy (e.g., multiple myeloma). Typical next steps: repeat the test, check albumin/globulin ratio, serum protein electrophoresis, urine protein and basic liver/kidney panels. Discuss results with your clinician.

What is an unhealthy protein level in Visit Clinic?plus

Unhealthy serum protein levels are generally outside the normal total protein range (~6.0–8.3 g/dL or 60–83 g/L). Low protein (hypoproteinemia) below this range may signal malnutrition, liver or kidney disease, or malabsorption. High protein (hyperproteinemia) above this range often reflects dehydration, chronic inflammation, or conditions like multiple myeloma. Interpretation depends on the specific protein and clinical context—consult your clinician.

What happens when TP is low in Visit Clinic?plus

Low total protein (hypoproteinemia) lowers blood oncotic pressure, causing fluid to leak into tissues and producing edema, ascites, or pleural effusions. It often reflects reduced albumin and immunoglobulins, leading to fatigue, muscle wasting, higher infection risk, poor wound healing, hair thinning, and weakness. Common underlying causes include liver disease, kidney protein loss, malnutrition, or malabsorption.