MPV Low: When Small Platelets Point to Something Bigger
A low MPV on your blood work means your platelets are smaller than average. On its own, that's about as informative as knowing your shoe size without knowing what sport you play. But in the right context, paired with a condition like active rheumatoid arthritis, a cancer diagnosis, or a low platelet count, that small number starts to carry real clinical weight. The problem is that MPV (mean platelet volume) is reported on nearly every complete blood count, yet most doctors glance past it. And honestly? They often have reason to. Research consistently shows that MPV has limited standalone value due to poor standardization across lab devices and a narrow range that doesn't shift dramatically. But "limited" isn't the same as "useless," and for certain patients, it matters.