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Your eosinophil percentage is in the expected range.
Very low eosinophils are usually not interpreted as a standalone issue.
Review only in context of the full CBC and clinical history.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — very lowLow eosinophils are commonly seen and usually not meaningful by themselves.
This marker is usually reassuring on its own.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — lowA slightly low eosinophil percentage is usually not clinically important by itself.
This marker is usually reassuring on its own.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline lowYour eosinophil percentage is in the expected range.
This marker is reassuring on its own.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — within reference rangeYour eosinophil percentage is low enough to avoid suggesting an allergy or parasite-driven pattern from this marker alone.
This marker is reassuring on its own.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimalA slightly high eosinophil percentage can occur with allergies, asthma, skin inflammation, medication reactions, or parasites.
Review symptoms and absolute eosinophil count with your clinician if persistent.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline highHigh eosinophils can reflect allergy, asthma, medication reaction, parasite exposure, or inflammatory conditions.
Discuss with your clinician, especially if you have allergy, breathing, skin, or digestive symptoms.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — above reference rangeVery high eosinophils need review because sustained eosinophilia can affect organs.
Seek clinician review with the absolute eosinophil count.
Eosinophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — very highUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.