manyimmunecells

Appearance

This post refers to the overall count, not morphology.
Neutrophils make up 50–70% of all white blood cells.
Changes in count are evaluated over several fields of view.

Increased Neutrophils (Neutrophilia)

Causes:

A) Acute Bacterial Infection

Most common and clinically important:

  • Pneumonia
  • UTI
  • Sinusitis
  • Appendicitis
  • Skin infections

B) Inflammation

  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • IBD
  • Injury
  • Post-surgical states

C) Stress Response

Acute adrenaline response increases neutrophils.

D) Medications

  • Corticosteroids
  • Lithium

E) Smoking / Obesity / Metabolic Syndrome

F) Haematological Disorders

Rare: CML, polycythaemia vera.

Decreased Neutrophils (Neutropenia)

Causes:

A) Viral Infections

Most common cause:

  • EBV
  • CMV
  • Influenza
  • Hepatitis viruses

B) Autoimmune Causes

  • Lupus
  • Sjögren’s
  • RA

C) Bone Marrow Suppression

  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiation
  • Toxic exposure

D) Nutritional Deficiencies

B12, folate, copper.

E) Severe Chronic Stress / Adrenal Fatigue

F) Overwhelming Infection

The marrow cannot keep up (late-stage sepsis).

Functional Interpretation

An increased or decreased count always reflects:

  • Immune load
  • Infection or inflammation
  • Terrain strain
  • Stress physiology
  • Bone marrow function

This post acts as a “summary” for the entire neutrophil module.

Interventions

(Depending on direction of change)

For Neutrophilia

  • Immune support (Immucil)
  • Anti-inflammatory support (omega-3, curcumin, quercetin)
  • Hydration
  • Identify infection source

For Neutropenia

  • B12/folate repletion
  • Zinc
  • Vitamin C
  • Glutathione
  • Immune restoration
  • Reduce toxic load

Further Investigations

Bone marrow function (if severe or persistent)

FBC + ESR

CRP

Blood culture (if infection suspected)

Viral panel

Autoimmune markers

Liver function

Thyroid panel