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It is related, the information you provided is very detailed and accurate, it is caused by allergies, and it will take a while to go down. If you are satisfied with the above, please don't disappoint my kindness and click "For Answer" in time.
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Eosinophils, generally in the progressive phase of the more severe disease, often significantly decrease, or even disappear, and turn into normal when the disease is transferred to the recovery phase. For example, after major surgery, typhoid fever, acute myocardial infarction, etc., eosinophils are often significantly reduced, and once the eosinophils return to normal, it means that the condition is improving. Combined with the patient's condition, blood follow-up is carried out, such as:
Typhoid fever, acute myocardial infarction, etc. 2When adrenal cortex hyperfunction is hyperactive or adrenocorticosteroids are used**, eosinophils are slowly reduced; 3.After severe burns or major surgery, eosinophils decrease, and after major surgery, once the eosinophils return to normal, it means that the surgical response is gone and the condition is improving.
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Clinical significance of eosinophilia:
1).Allergic diseases: bronchial asthma, drug allergies, urticaria, food allergies, angioedema, serum sickness and other peripheral blood eosinophilia can reach more than 10%.
Some patients with parasitic infection have significantly increased eosinophils, and the total number of inverted leukocytes is as high as tens of thousands, and more than 90% are eosinophils, which is an eosinophilic leukemia-like reaction.
3).**Diseases: such as eczema, exfoliative epidermitis, pemphigus, psoriasis, etc., peripheral blood eosinophils can be mildly to moderately increased.
4).Blood diseases: such as chronic myeloid leukemia, eosinophilic leukemia, lymphoma, multiple myeloma, eosinophilic granuloma, etc., peripheral blood eosinophils can be quietly increased to varying degrees, and some can be accompanied by naïve eosinophilia.
5).Certain malignancies: Certain epithelial tumors, such as lung cancer, can cause eosinophil eosinophilia (6).Certain infectious diseases: In acute infections, eosinophils are mostly reduced, but scarlet fever can cause an increase in eosinophilic slag cells.
7).Others: rheumatic diseases, hypopituitary gland and allergic interstitial nephritis are also often accompanied by eosinophilia.
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1. The kits used in each hospital are different, and the reference range of normal values is also different, and there are not many normal values at your heights!
3. Increased number of eosinophils: common in allergic diseases, parasitic diseases, some ** diseases (such as eczema, pemphigus, psoriasis, etc.), some infectious diseases (such as scarlet fever), etc.
4. In short, the count of eosinophils in allergic reactions and parasitic infections will increase.
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Eosinophilic granulocyte cells have a light red color in the Wright-stained blood smear, and the cytoplasm is often not visible because they are full of granules. The particles are bright red in color and micron in diameter. The nucleus is rod-shaped or lobulated.
Under the electron microscope, there are relatively developed Golgi complexes, a small number of mitochondria, and a large amount of glycogen granules in the cytoplasm. The granules are divided into two types, containing histamine, aryl sulfatase, phospholipase, acid phosphatase, cyanide and insensitive peroxidase. Eosinophils have chemotaxis, phagocytosis and bactericidal effects.
Normal reference value: percentage or ( Absolute value 109 l If the eosinophil ratio is high, it can generally be seen in the following conditions: 1 Allergic diseases, bronchial asthma, urticaria, drug and food allergies, angioedema, etc.
2 Parasitic diseases, especially the large helminths that parasitize in the intestine, such as roundworms, hookworm infections, and parasites that live in tissues and organs outside the intestine, such as schistosomiasis, lung flukes, filaria, hycystis, etc. 3 Some ** diseases, such as eczema, exfoliative dermatitis, pemphigus, psoriasis and other eosinophils can be mild and moderately elevated. 4 Certain Infectious Diseases:
During the recovery phase of infectious disease and in the acute phase of scarlet fever, eosinophils may be mildly elevated. 5 Others: rheumatic diseases, anterior pituitary hypofunction, adrenal insufficiency, etc., often accompanied by eosinophilia.
The percentage of your eosinophils is mildly elevated, generally speaking, allergies may be caused by the majority, it is recommended to do further immunoglobulin IgE and allergen screening assays to detect what caused the allergic reaction, and then you can treat the symptoms. Anti-allergy medications** are usually used.
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