LabNorms Population Percentiles

Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin (MCH)

Mean corpuscular hemoglobin measures the average amount of hemoglobin per red blood cell. MCH tracks closely with MCV and increases slightly with age.

Unit: pg · 12 slices · age and sex · 1 source

Filed under panels: Complete Blood Count · topics: Hematology

Mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) is the average mass of hemoglobin in a single red blood cell, expressed in picograms. It is calculated from hemoglobin concentration and red blood cell count. MCH is closely correlated with MCV because larger cells generally contain more hemoglobin. It helps distinguish hypochromic from normochromic red cell populations.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How is MCH different from MCHC?

MCH is the total hemoglobin per cell (mass), while MCHC is hemoglobin concentration per unit volume of red cell. MCH rises with cell size (larger cells carry more hemoglobin), but MCHC can remain stable even as cells grow larger if the hemoglobin content scales proportionally.

Why does MCH track with MCV?

Larger red cells contain more hemoglobin. When MCV rises (as with B12 deficiency), MCH rises in parallel because each cell has more room for hemoglobin. When MCV falls (as with iron deficiency), MCH falls because smaller cells carry less.

Why does MCH increase with age?

Because MCH tracks MCV, it rises for the same reasons MCV does: subclinical B12 and folate insufficiency become more prevalent with age, and erythropoiesis slows, producing cells that tend to be slightly larger.

Data Sources

Related Analytes

Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV)

Mean cell volume (closely correlated red cell index)

Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin Concentration (MCHC)

Hemoglobin concentration per cell volume

Hemoglobin

Total hemoglobin drives MCH calculation