Absolute Eosinophil Count

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Absolute Eosinophil Count
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Absolute Eosinophil Count, in Visit Clinic

Measures the number of eosinophil white blood cells to help find allergies, parasites, and some inflammatory disorders in Visit Clinic.

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centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
25 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Absolute Eosinophil Count Test in Visit Clinic?

The Absolute Eosinophil Count measures the number of eosinophils, a type of white blood cell, in your blood. Eosinophils help fight certain infections and take part in allergic reactions and inflammation. Changes in this count can point to allergies, asthma, parasitic infections, drug reactions, autoimmune conditions, or some blood cancers. Doctors use it to help diagnose these problems and to monitor how well treatments are working. It is often looked at alongside a full blood count and clinical symptoms to guide care. Results taken over time can show whether a condition is getting better or worse.

Absolute Eosinophil Count Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Absolute Eosinophil Count Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Absolute Eosinophil Count test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Absolute Eosinophil Count Test in Visit Clinic?

This test is commonly part of a complete blood count with differential. Doctors order it when patients have symptoms like wheeze, persistent cough, skin rashes, unexplained fever, or abdominal pain. It helps diagnose and monitor allergies, asthma, parasitic infections, certain autoimmune or blood disorders, and drug reactions. Abnormal levels may come from infections, allergic diseases, immune conditions, or effects of medications. A family history of asthma or strong allergies may make this test more relevant.

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Frequently asked questions

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What happens if the absolute eosinophil count is high in Visit Clinic?plus

A high absolute eosinophil count (eosinophilia) usually signals allergic reactions, parasitic infections, certain medications, autoimmune diseases, or some cancers. It can cause symptoms like rashes, breathing problems, and gastrointestinal issues. Severe or persistent eosinophilia may damage organs (lungs, heart, nerves) and requires medical evaluation to identify the cause and start appropriate treatment to prevent complications.

How is AEC calculated in Visit Clinic?plus

Absolute eosinophil count (AEC) is calculated by multiplying the total white blood cell (WBC) count by the percentage of eosinophils from the differential, then dividing by 100. Units are cells per microliter (cells/µL). Example: WBC 6,000/µL with 3% eosinophils → AEC = 6,000 × 3 / 100 = 180 cells/µL.

When should I worry about my eosinophil count in Visit Clinic?plus

Worry if your absolute eosinophil count (AEC) is persistently >500 cells/µL (0.5×10^9/L), and especially if it exceeds 1,500 cells/µL (1.5×10^9/L) or keeps rising. See a doctor sooner if you have symptoms—fever, weight loss, rashes, breathing or GI problems—or signs of organ involvement. Clinicians will repeat tests and investigate allergies, drugs, parasites, autoimmune disease or blood disorders.

What are the symptoms of high eosinophils in Visit Clinic?plus

High eosinophil counts (eosinophilia) may be asymptomatic or cause symptoms depending on the cause: skin rashes, itching, hives or eczema; nasal congestion and sinusitis; cough, wheeze or asthma flare-ups; gastrointestinal pain, nausea, diarrhea or weight loss; fever, fatigue and unexplained infections; and less commonly muscle weakness or nerve problems from organ involvement. Severity varies with the underlying condition.

What cancers cause high absolute eosinophils in Visit Clinic?plus

Certain cancers can cause marked eosinophilia. Hematologic malignancies include Hodgkin lymphoma, T‑cell and other non‑Hodgkin lymphomas, chronic eosinophilic leukemia and other myeloproliferative neoplasms, and some acute leukemias. Paraneoplastic eosinophilia also occurs with solid tumors — notably lung, gastrointestinal, renal, ovarian and some head‑and‑neck cancers. Evaluation should assess both hematologic and solid‑tumor causes.

How do you treat a high eosinophil count in Visit Clinic?plus

Treating high eosinophil counts focuses on finding and managing the underlying cause: treat parasitic infections with appropriate antiparasitics, stop or switch offending drugs, and control allergic inflammation with antihistamines, inhaled steroids or systemic corticosteroids for severe cases. For persistent or severe disease, refer to specialists—hematology/immunology—for further testing, immunosuppressants or targeted biologic therapies (e.g. anti‑IL‑5). Monitor counts and organ function.