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Your neutrophil percentage is in the expected range for the white blood cell differential.
Neutrophils are the main white blood cells used for bacterial defense. A very low percentage can be concerning, but the absolute neutrophil count is the safer number to use for risk.
Seek prompt clinician review, especially if you have fever, infection symptoms, or a low absolute neutrophil count.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — critically low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}})A low neutrophil percentage means fewer white cells are in the neutrophil group than expected. This can happen after viral illness or from shifts in the white-cell differential.
Review this with your clinician in the context of total WBC and absolute neutrophil count.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — below reference rangeA slightly low neutrophil percentage is often a mild differential shift. The absolute neutrophil count matters more than the percentage alone.
Ask whether the absolute neutrophil count is normal and whether repeat testing is needed.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline lowYour neutrophil percentage is in the expected range for the white blood cell differential.
This marker is reassuring on its own when total WBC and absolute counts also fit.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — within reference rangeYour neutrophil percentage sits in the expected range for immune-cell balance.
This marker is reassuring on its own.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimalA slightly high neutrophil percentage can happen with stress, inflammation, recent exercise, corticosteroids, or early infection.
Review symptoms, total WBC, and absolute neutrophil count with your clinician if it persists.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline highA high neutrophil percentage can point to infection, inflammation, stress response, medication effects, or a shift in white-cell balance.
Discuss with your clinician, especially if total WBC, CRP, fever, or symptoms are also present.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — above reference rangeA very high neutrophil percentage can occur with major infection, inflammation, or physiological stress, especially if total WBC is also high.
Seek prompt clinician review if you feel unwell, have fever, or other inflammatory markers are elevated.
Neutrophils: {{value}} {{unit}} — critically highUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.