CD3 Absolute Count

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CD3 Absolute Count
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CD3 Absolute Count, in Visit Clinic

Measures the number of CD3 positive T cells in the blood to assess immune system health in Visit Clinic.

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 CD3 Absolute Count Test in Visit Clinic?

The CD3 Absolute Count measures the number of CD3-positive T lymphocytes in a blood sample. CD3 is a protein found on most T cells. T cells help fight infections and coordinate the immune response. Knowing the total T cell number helps doctors assess overall immune health. Low counts can indicate immune suppression from HIV, genetic conditions, chemotherapy, or steroids. High counts may point to some infections or lymphocyte disorders. Doctors use this test with other immune cell counts to diagnose immune problems, monitor disease or treatment, and guide decisions after transplant or during immunosuppressive therapy. Results are compared to reference ranges and other tests.

CD3 Absolute Count Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

CD3 Absolute Count Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The CD3 Absolute Count test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a CD3 Absolute Count Test in Visit Clinic?

CD3 Absolute Count is often part of a lymphocyte subset panel used to evaluate immune function. Doctors may order it for patients with repeated infections, unexplained fevers, unusual lymph node swelling, or when monitoring HIV or immunosuppressive therapy. Abnormal results can be caused by infections, autoimmune diseases, chemotherapy, steroids, or bone marrow problems. A family history of immune deficiency may prompt testing earlier.

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Frequently asked questions

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What does it mean when your CD3 count is high in Visit Clinic?plus

A high CD3 count means an elevated number of T lymphocytes (cells expressing the CD3 marker), reflecting increased T‑cell activity. Causes include infections, inflammation, autoimmune conditions, immune recovery, or certain blood cancers. Results need clinical correlation with symptoms and additional tests (CD4/CD8 ratios, full blood count, flow cytometry). Discuss results with your clinician for further evaluation and next steps.

What does CD3 positive mean in Visit Clinic?plus

CD3 positive means cells express the CD3 protein complex, identifying them as T lymphocytes. CD3 is part of the T‑cell receptor signaling machinery, so CD3+ cells are mature T cells detected by flow cytometry or immunostaining. Clinically, CD3 positivity confirms T‑cell lineage in immune profiling or diagnosing lymphoid disorders and helps distinguish T‑cell from B‑cell populations.

What is a good CD3 percentage in Visit Clinic?plus

A good CD3 percentage—reflecting total T lymphocytes among lymphocytes—is generally about 60–85% in healthy adults. Different labs and age groups use slightly different reference ranges (commonly ~50–80% or 60–85%). Small deviations can occur with infections, immune conditions or lab variability; results should be interpreted alongside absolute counts, CD4/CD8 ratios and clinical context by a clinician.

What does CD3 measure in Visit Clinic?plus

CD3 measures the number and proportion of T lymphocytes (CD3-positive cells) in blood using flow cytometry. CD3 is a protein complex on mature T cells; its count reflects overall T-cell status and immune competence. Clinically it’s used to evaluate immunodeficiency, infections, autoimmune disease, and to monitor immune reconstitution or response to immunotherapies.

What cancers cause high T cells in Visit Clinic?plus

T‑cell malignancies typically produce markedly elevated T‑cell counts. These include T‑cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T‑ALL), adult T‑cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL), T‑cell prolymphocytic leukemia, peripheral T‑cell lymphomas (including anaplastic large‑cell lymphoma), and cutaneous T‑cell lymphomas (mycosis fungoides, Sézary syndrome). Some reactive conditions (e.g., Hodgkin or T‑cell‑rich B‑cell lymphoma) can also show increased reactive T‑cell populations.

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

A high total cholesterol level means excess blood lipids, especially LDL, which can build up in artery walls causing atherosclerosis. Over time this raises risk of coronary artery disease, heart attack, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease. High TC is often asymptomatic; doctors recommend lifestyle changes (diet, exercise, weight loss, smoking cessation), risk assessment, and possibly lipid‑lowering medications and regular monitoring.