Initializing Vogelview...
Performing medical cross-referencing...
Initializing Vogelview...
Performing medical cross-referencing...
Loading...
Also reported in: cells/µL, x10^9/L
Your eosinophil count is in the normal range. This is a reassuring finding for allergic and parasitic disease surveillance.
Your eosinophil count is below detectable levels. Eosinopenia (very low eosinophils) is commonly seen during acute infection, acute stress response, or with corticosteroid use. It can also be seen in Cushing's syndrome. It is rarely a primary clinical concern.
Discuss with your doctor in context of current medications and clinical status.
Eosinophil count undetectable — eosinopenia; may reflect acute stress or steroid useYour eosinophil count is within the normal reference range. Eosinophils are white blood cells involved in allergic responses and parasitic infection defense. A normal count is reassuring.
No action needed.
Eosinophil count: normal range — no eosinophiliaYour eosinophil count is at the lower end of normal. This is not a clinical concern.
No action needed.
Eosinophil count: low-normal — no clinical concernYour eosinophil count is in the normal range. This is a reassuring finding for allergic and parasitic disease surveillance.
No specific action required.
Eosinophil count within reference range — normal eosinophil levelYour eosinophil count is in the optimal range, reflecting healthy immune function without excessive allergic activation.
No action needed.
Eosinophil count: optimal — ideal eosinophil levelYour eosinophil count is mildly above the reference range. Mild eosinophilia is commonly caused by allergic conditions (asthma, eczema, allergic rhinitis), parasitic infections, drug reactions, and inflammatory conditions. It requires investigation to identify the cause.
Discuss with your doctor. Review allergic conditions, medications (drug reactions can cause eosinophilia), and consider stool parasite testing if travel history warrants it.
Eosinophil count 0.5–1.5 K/uL — borderline elevated; mild eosinophilia; further investigation warrantedYour eosinophil count is significantly elevated (eosinophilia). Causes include parasitic infections (helminths), noticeable atopic disease, eosinophilic gastrointestinal disease, hypereosinophilic syndrome, drug reactions, Churg-Strauss syndrome, and certain malignancies. At this level, organ damage from eosinophil infiltration is possible.
Seek medical evaluation. Stool parasitology, comprehensive allergy panel, chest imaging, echocardiogram, and specialist referral are typically indicated for eosinophilia above 1.5 K/uL.
Eosinophil count >1.5 K/uL — elevated; significant eosinophilia; serious causes must be excludedYour eosinophil count is critically elevated, consistent with hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) or noticeable secondary eosinophilia. Very high eosinophils can infiltrate and damage the heart (endomyocardial fibrosis), lungs, nervous system, and skin. This is a medical emergency if organ involvement is present.
Seek urgent hematology or specialist evaluation. Cardiac assessment (echocardiogram), pulmonary evaluation, bone marrow biopsy, and targeted treatment (steroids, imatinib) may be urgently required.
Eosinophil count >5.0 K/uL — critically elevated; hypereosinophilic syndrome; organ damage riskUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.