Lab Panels Are a Shortcut to the Patient Story
When you’re new to nursing, individual labs can feel like random numbers thrown at you. Sodium, potassium, BUN, creatinine, AST, ALT, WBC. It’s a lot.
Lab panels are designed to help with that.
Panels give you a big picture snapshot. They bundle multiple tests together so you can quickly assess a patient’s status across more than one body system. Instead of ordering separate tests for electrolytes, kidney function, and glucose, a provider can order one panel and get a useful overview fast.
And here’s the part nursing students need to hear.
Panels are not just “doctor stuff.” Nurses use these values constantly to detect risk, anticipate provider orders, and catch deterioration early.
Why Panels Are So Useful
Lab panels are helpful for three big reasons.
They provide information quickly.
They often combine multiple systems in one order.
They’re frequently run onsite in the hospital lab, so you get results fast.
But there’s one tradeoff you need to remember.
The more complex the panel, the longer it can take to come back.
This matters in clinical decision making. If your patient is unstable and you need quick information, you may not have time to wait for an extensive panel.
So let’s break down the panels you will see most often as a nursing student, especially the ones that show up on exams and NCLEX-style questions.
(Download a Free Lab Panels Cheatsheet)
BMP: Basic Metabolic Panel
Think of the BMP as your quick snapshot panel.
It gives you a look at:
Kidney function
Electrolyte status
Glucose
The key kidney values you’ll see here are BUN and creatinine. These help you assess how well the kidneys are filtering waste products.
You’ll also see electrolytes like sodium and potassium, which impact fluid balance, cardiac rhythm, and neurologic function.
And you’ll see glucose, which matters for diabetic management, stress response, steroid use, and overall metabolic status.
What nursing students should remember about the BMP is this.
If you need fast insight into kidney function, electrolytes, and glucose, BMP is the go-to because it tends to be faster than broader panels.
CMP: Comprehensive Metabolic Panel
The CMP includes everything in the BMP plus additional liver and protein values.
So if BMP is kidney, electrolytes, glucose, CMP is that plus more depth.
The CMP adds:
Liver function markers like AST, ALT, and alkaline phosphatase
Total bilirubin
Protein markers like total protein and albumin
This panel is often ordered when there is concern for dehydration, malnutrition, liver disease, medication effects, or a more complete picture of metabolic status.
But remember the big concept.
Because the CMP includes more tests, it can take longer to result.
So the choice between BMP and CMP is not just about what you want to know. It is also about how quickly you need the answer.
(Learn more about the Lab Draw Order)
How to Decide Between BMP and CMP on Exams
Here is the exam-style thinking.
If the question is focused on kidneys, electrolytes, and glucose and they need the information quickly, BMP is the clean answer.
If the question suggests liver involvement, nutrition issues, protein status, jaundice, or you need a broader metabolic assessment, CMP becomes the better choice.
On the floor, you do not choose what gets ordered, but you absolutely should understand what each panel is telling you once it comes back.

CBC: Complete Blood Count
The CBC is one of the most common lab panels in the hospital, and it tells you what is happening with the patient’s blood cells.
A CBC helps assess for:
Anemia
Infection or inflammation
Bone marrow issues like leukemia
Bleeding risk and clotting potential
The major components you’ll see in a CBC include:
Red blood cell count
White blood cell count, often with a differential
Hemoglobin and hematocrit, often called H and H
Platelets
A differential breaks down the types of white blood cells, which can give clues about bacterial infection, viral illness, allergic response, or immune suppression.
CBC also includes red blood cell indices like MCH and MCHC, which relate to the size and hemoglobin content of red blood cells. For nursing students, these are less commonly tested in-depth, but you should know they help categorize types of anemia.
The big takeaways for the CBC are simple.
Low hemoglobin and hematocrit suggests anemia or blood loss.
High or low WBC can signal infection, inflammation, or immune issues.
Platelets guide bleeding risk and clotting concerns.
Other Lab Panels You’ll See
Beyond BMP, CMP, and CBC, you will run into panels targeted to specific organs or clinical situations.
Liver function tests focus on liver-specific markers like AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, and bilirubin.
Renal panels look more specifically at kidney function and may include values like BUN, creatinine, albumin, and sometimes associated tests like a urinalysis.
Other common panels include:
Lipid panels for cholesterol and cardiovascular risk
Cardiac markers such as troponin
Electrolyte panels for focused electrolyte evaluation
Each panel has a purpose. Your job as a nurse is to understand how that purpose fits the patient in front of you.
(Learn more with the Lab Values Course)
Patient-Centered Care and Lab Panels
Here is the mindset shift that makes labs click.
Labs are not just numbers. They are clues about the patient’s story.
A CMP that shows low albumin is not just a lab abnormality. It might connect to malnutrition, liver dysfunction, chronic illness, or fluid shifts.
A BMP with rising creatinine is not just kidney values. It may mean dehydration, acute kidney injury, medication toxicity, or poor perfusion.
A CBC with elevated WBC and a fever is not just infection. It is a patient who may be deteriorating and needs early intervention.
Lab panels support patient-centered care by helping you see patterns, anticipate needs, and catch changes early.
Final Recap for Nursing Students
Remember these core points.
Lab panels provide a big picture look at patient systems.
More complex panels usually take longer to result.
BMP is kidney function, electrolytes, and glucose.
CMP is BMP plus liver function and protein markers.
CBC tells you what is happening with blood cells, including infection and anemia clues.
There are many other panels, so use the lab as a resource when you are unsure.
If you can keep those concepts straight, labs will start to feel less like chaos and more like a roadmap.


