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MCV – Mean Corpuscular Volume

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Average Size/Volume of Red Blood Cells – Key Marker in Classifying Anemia)

Synonyms

  • MCV
  • Mean cell volume
  • Mean corpuscular volume
  • Average red cell volume
  • RBC volume index

Units of Measurement

  • fL (femtoliters)
  • µm³ (cubic micrometers)
  • cu µm
  • cubic µm

Key Unit Conversions

1 fL=1 µm3=1 cubic µm1\ \text{fL} = 1\ \text{µm}^3 = 1\ \text{cubic µm}1 fL=1 µm3=1 cubic µm

So:

  • 80 fL = 80 µm³
  • 95 fL = 95 µm³
  • 120 fL = 120 µm³

All units represent the same value.

Description

MCV indicates the average volume of a single red blood cell (RBC).

Calculated as:

MCV (fL)=Hematocrit (L/L)RBC count (×10¹²/L)×1000\text{MCV (fL)} = \frac{\text{Hematocrit (L/L)}}{\text{RBC count (×10¹²/L)}} \times 1000MCV (fL)=RBC count (×10¹²/L)Hematocrit (L/L)​×1000

It is one of the 3 core RBC indices:

  • MCV
  • MCH
  • MCHC

MCV is essential for classification of anemia into:

  • Microcytic (low MCV)
  • Normocytic (normal MCV)
  • Macrocytic (high MCV)

Physiological Role

MCV itself is not a physiologic molecule; it reflects:

  • Erythropoiesis
  • Iron availability
  • DNA synthesis
  • Cell membrane structure
  • RBC hydration status

It is a major surrogate marker for nutritional, genetic, and hematologic disorders.

Clinical Significance

LOW MCV

(Most common abnormality)

Primary Causes

  1. Iron Deficiency Anemia (IDA) - classic
  2. Thalassemia Trait (very low MCV with normal RDW)
  3. Anemia of Chronic Disease (mildly low)
  4. Sideroblastic Anemia
  5. Lead Poisoning
  6. Chronic blood loss
  7. Copper deficiency (rare)

Patterns

  • Low MCV
  • Low MCH
  • Low MCHC
  • High RDW (except in thalassemia trait)

HIGH MCV

Megaloblastic Causes

  • Vitamin B12 deficiency
  • Folate deficiency
  • Methotrexate
  • Antiretroviral drugs
  • Hydroxyurea

Non-Megaloblastic Causes

  • Alcoholism
  • Liver disease
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Reticulocytosis (retics are large)
  • Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS)
  • Aplastic anemia

Patterns

  • High MCV
  • Normal or high MCH
  • Normal MCHC
  • Hypersegmented neutrophils in megaloblastic anemia

NORMAL MCV

(MCV normal but RBC indices abnormal)

Occurs in:

  • Acute blood loss
  • Hemolytic anemia (early)
  • Chronic kidney disease
  • Combined nutritional deficiencies (B12 + iron)
  • Early IDA
  • Bone marrow failure

Reference Intervals

(WHO + Tietz 8E + Mayo + ARUP)

Adults

  • 80 – 100 fL
    (= 80–100 µm³)

Children

AgeMCV
Newborn95–120 fL
2–6 months85–105 fL
6 months–6 years70–86 fL
>6 years76–90 fL

Interpretation Flags

  • MCV < 80 fL → microcytosis
  • MCV > 100 fL → macrocytosis
  • MCV > 110 fL → consider megaloblastic anemia or MDS
  • MCV > 120 fL → severe B12/folate deficiency

Diagnostic Uses

1. Anemia Classification

The primary use of MCV.

2. Differentiate Causes of Microcytosis

  • IDA vs thalassemia trait
  • Sideroblastic anemia vs chronic disease

3. Detect Nutritional Deficiencies

  • B12
  • Folate

4. Alcoholism Screening

Macrocytosis is common even without anemia.

5. Evaluate Bone Marrow Function

Macrocytosis in MDS.

6. Monitor Treatment

  • Iron therapy response
  • Vitamin supplementation
  • Reticulocyte-related changes

7. RBC Morphology Correlation

MCV gives a quantitative summary; smear confirms morphology.

Analytical Notes

  • Automated RBC counters measure MCV directly.
  • Cold agglutinins can falsely increase MCV.
  • Hyperglycemia and high WBC count falsely increase MCV.
  • Dehydration may concentrate Hct, altering MCV indirectly.
  • Always correlate with MCH, MCHC, RDW.

Clinical Pearls

  • Thalassemia traitvery low MCV but normal RDW.
  • Early IDA → MCV may be normal; MCH falls first.
  • Alcoholism is the most common non-megaloblastic cause of high MCV.
  • Combined deficiencies (iron + B12) may produce normal MCV with wide RDW.
  • Reticulocytosis temporarily increases MCV because retics are larger cells.

Interesting Fact

Newborns naturally have the largest RBCs in human physiology — an evolutionary adaptation to fetal oxygen transport - giving them physiologic macrocytosis.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Hematology
  2. WHO Hematology Reference Ranges
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - RBC Indices
  4. ARUP Consult - CBC Interpretation
  5. MedlinePlus / NIH - CBC & RBC Indices

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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