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Also reported in: 10^3/uL, x10^9/L
Your eosinophil count is in the normal range, suggesting no significant allergy, parasitic infection, or inflammatory condition is driving excess eosinophil production.
Eosinopenia (absent eosinophils) is commonly seen during acute stress, noticeable bacterial infections, or with corticosteroid use. It is rarely harmful on its own but signals significant immune system mobilization.
Usually not concerning in isolation. No specific action needed for eosinopenia alone.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — very low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Low eosinophils typically reflect your immune system being in 'emergency mode' — either responding to a major bacterial infection or suppressed by stress hormones or steroid medications.
This is rarely clinically concerning on its own. The focus should be on whatever is causing the stress response.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — below reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A marginally low eosinophil count is common and rarely significant. It often reflects normal daily variation in these immune cells.
No action needed.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline lowYour eosinophil count is in the normal range, suggesting no significant allergy, parasitic infection, or inflammatory condition is driving excess eosinophil production.
No action needed.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — within reference rangeYour eosinophil count sits in the healthy zone — present enough to do their job (fighting parasites and modulating allergies) but not elevated enough to cause tissue damage.
Good result. No action needed.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimalA borderline elevation in eosinophils is most commonly driven by allergies (hay fever, asthma, food sensitivities) or a reaction to medications. It is rarely a sign of anything serious at this level.
Think about any new allergies, medications, or respiratory symptoms. If you haven't been evaluated for allergies, this may be a good time.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline highElevated eosinophils (eosinophilia) are most commonly caused by allergies, asthma, eczema, or a reaction to medications. In travelers to developing regions, parasitic infections are also an important consideration. Rarely, it can reflect an autoimmune or blood condition.
Your doctor should investigate for allergic conditions, medication reactions, and parasites if you've traveled recently. Most may contribute to are treatable.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — above reference range (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Extreme eosinophilia can cause organ damage — particularly to the heart, lungs, and nervous system (hypereosinophilic syndrome). At this level, the eosinophils themselves can infiltrate and damage tissue if untreated.
Seek urgent medical evaluation. This level of eosinophilia requires urgent investigation and likely treatment to prevent organ damage.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — very high (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.