Initializing Vogelview...
Performing medical cross-referencing...
Initializing Vogelview...
Performing medical cross-referencing...
Loading...
Also reported in: ng/mL, µg/L
Your ECP is in the normal range, consistent with controlled or absent allergic inflammation.
Your ECP is undetectable. ECP is released by activated eosinophils during allergic inflammation. An undetectable level indicates no active eosinophil-mediated allergic inflammation.
No action needed.
ECP undetectable — no eosinophil activation detectedYour ECP is within the normal reference range. This indicates no significant active eosinophil-mediated inflammation, which is reassuring for asthma control and allergic disease activity.
No action needed.
ECP within normal reference range — no significant eosinophil activationYour ECP is in the low-normal range with minimal eosinophil activation.
No action needed.
ECP: low-normal — minimal eosinophil activationYour ECP is in the normal range, consistent with controlled or absent allergic inflammation.
No specific action required.
ECP within reference range — normal eosinophil activityYour ECP is in the optimal range, reflecting very low eosinophil activation and excellent control of allergic inflammation.
No action needed.
ECP: optimal — very low eosinophil activation markerYour ECP is mildly above the reference range, suggesting increasing eosinophil activation and allergic inflammation. This level is often seen in suboptimally controlled asthma or during seasonal allergen exposure.
Discuss with your allergist or pulmonologist. In asthma patients, this may indicate need for inhaled corticosteroid dose adjustment. Allergen avoidance measures should be reviewed.
ECP 24–40 mcg/L — borderline elevated; eosinophil-mediated inflammation increasingYour ECP is significantly elevated, indicating active eosinophil-mediated inflammation. This is associated with poorly controlled asthma, active eczema, eosinophilic esophagitis, or other eosinophil-driven conditions. Elevated ECP is also predictive of future asthma exacerbations.
Seek allergy or pulmonology evaluation. Asthma management should be reviewed. Eosinophilic gastrointestinal disease or skin involvement should be assessed if relevant.
ECP >40 mcg/L — elevated; active eosinophil-mediated allergic inflammationYour ECP is critically elevated, indicating noticeable ongoing eosinophil-mediated inflammation. This level may indicate noticeable asthma, hypereosinophilic syndrome with organ involvement, or eosinophilic organ damage. Urgent specialist evaluation is required.
Seek urgent allergy/immunology or hematology evaluation. Organ function assessment and aggressive anti-inflammatory treatment are needed.
ECP >100 mcg/L — critically elevated; noticeable eosinophilic inflammation; organ involvement possibleUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.