Inflammation

ESR Test

Also known as: Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate, Sed Rate, Sedimentation Rate

What is ESR?

ESR (erythrocyte sedimentation rate) measures how quickly red blood cells settle at the bottom of a test tube. Faster settling indicates inflammation.[MedlinePlus (NIH)]

What This Test Measures

This test measures the rate at which red blood cells fall in a test tube over one hour, expressed in mm/hr.[Mayo Clinic]

Why It's Important

  • ESR is a nonspecific marker of inflammation, used to detect and monitor inflammatory conditions.[MedlinePlus (NIH)]

  • ESR is particularly useful for monitoring polymyalgia rheumatica, temporal arteritis, and rheumatoid arthritis.[Cleveland Clinic]

Who Should Get This Test?

ESR helps detect and monitor inflammation, particularly in certain rheumatic diseases.

Risk Factors

  • Symptoms suggestive of polymyalgia rheumatica or giant cell arteritis
  • Suspected or known rheumatoid arthritis
  • Monitoring inflammatory bowel disease activity
  • Unexplained fever or weight loss
  • Suspected infection (osteomyelitis, endocarditis)
  • Symptoms of temporal arteritis (headache, vision changes)
  • Monitoring response to treatment for inflammatory conditions
  • Screening for certain cancers (multiple myeloma)

Screening Schedule

Ordered when inflammatory disease is suspected; repeated to monitor disease activity and treatment response.

Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

What Happens During the Test

Blood Test

A blood sample is drawn from a vein and placed in a tall, thin tube. The distance red blood cells fall in one hour is measured in millimeters.

Duration

5-10 minutes for blood draw; test itself takes 1 hour; results same day

Discomfort Level

Minimal discomfort from needle insertion

Source: Mayo Clinic

Risks & Side Effects

Minimal Risk

Standard blood draw with minimal risks.

  • Brief pain at needle site
  • Small bruise may develop
  • Rare: lightheadedness
  • Very rare: infection at puncture site
Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

Normal Range

Men: 0-15 mm/hr (under 50) or 0-20 mm/hr (over 50). Women: 0-20 mm/hr (under 50) or 0-30 mm/hr (over 50).

Note: ESR naturally increases with age.

Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

Unit Conversion

Convert between mm/hr and mm/hr

ESR is reported universally in mm/hr (millimeters per hour)
mm/hrmm/hr
1010
2020
4040
6060
100100
Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

High Values

High ESR indicates inflammation from infections, autoimmune diseases, cancer, or tissue damage. Very high ESR (>100) suggests serious disease.[Mayo Clinic]

Low Values

Low ESR is normal and may also be seen with polycythemia, sickle cell disease, or extreme leukocytosis.[Cleveland Clinic]

Test Limitations & Accuracy

ESR is a nonspecific test with several limitations:

  • Cannot identify the source or type of inflammation
  • Affected by age (increases naturally with age)
  • Affected by anemia (higher ESR) and polycythemia (lower ESR)
  • Pregnancy increases ESR
  • Obesity can elevate ESR
  • Some medications affect ESR (oral contraceptives, aspirin)
  • Slower to rise and fall than CRP in acute conditions
  • Technical factors (temperature, tube angle) affect results
Source: Cleveland Clinic

Alternative & Complementary Tests

ESR is often ordered alongside other inflammatory markers:

Rises and falls faster than ESR; more sensitive for acute inflammation

For cardiovascular risk assessment

Complete Blood Count

WBC count and other markers of infection/inflammation

Plasma Viscosity

Alternative to ESR; less affected by anemia

Acute phase reactant; also used to assess iron stores

Source: Mayo Clinic

References

  1. 1.ESR TestMedlinePlus (NIH)
  2. 2.ESR TestCleveland Clinic

Medical Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider for interpretation of test results and medical decisions.

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