Neutrophils are the most numerous white blood cells (typically 40–75 % of total leukocytes) and the body’s rapid-response team against acute bacterial invasion and tissue injury.

How they come about

Produced in huge numbers in the bone marrow (up to 100 billion daily), they mature over 10–14 days, becoming packed with granules containing powerful antimicrobial enzymes, reactive oxygen species, and proteins.

What they do

Within minutes of an alarm signal they marginate (stick to blood-vessel walls), squeeze between endothelial cells, and migrate directly to the site of infection or damage. There they:

  • Phagocytose (engulf and digest) bacteria and debris
  • Release neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) to immobilise pathogens
  • Degranulate to flood the area with antimicrobial substances

Where they can go

Virtually any tissue that becomes inflamed or infected – skin, lungs, sinuses, gut, joints, urinary tract, and more.

Lifespan

  • Circulating in blood: 6–12 hours
  • Active in tissues: 1–2 days, after which they die and form part of the pus that macrophages later clear away

In practice

A clear neutrophilia (>7 per field at 200×) almost always signals an acute bacterial process, significant stress, or acute toxicity. They arrive fast, work hard, and burn out quickly – the classic “first wave” of the acute inflammatory response.

Appearance

Multi-lobed nucleus (3–5 lobes), pale cytoplasm with fine granules

Relevance

Normal: 40–75 % (2–7 per field)

Neutrophilia: >7 per field or >75 %

Neutropenia: <2 per field

Implications / Increased In

Acute bacterial infection, acute inflammation, tissue necrosis, stress, toxicity, dehydration, steroid use

Decreased In

Viral infections, chemotherapy, severe toxicity, B12/folate deficiency, bone-marrow suppression

General Guidelines

Same as above + strict avoidance of sugar/trans fats during acute phase

Interventions (Neutrophilia)

Core Immune Protocol + Calcium ascorbate to bowel tolerance (6–15 g/day)

Interventions (Neutropenia)

NeoFlora + Glutathione 500 + high-dose methyl-B12 & folate + trace minerals

Further Investigations

CRP, blood culture if fever, viral serology

Left Shift / Toxic Neutrophils

Appearance

Band forms, Döhle bodies, toxic granulation, cytoplasmic vacuoles

Relevance

Any visible toxic changes = significant

Implications

Overwhelming acute infection or toxicity

Interventions

Immucil 3 caps 3× daily + HumiCaps + massive antioxidants 5–14 days

Hypersegmented Neutrophils

Appearance

5 nuclear lobes

Implications

B12 and/or folate deficiency, chronic heavy-metal burden

Interventions

Methylcobalamin 5 000 mcg + methylfolate 5 mg + B-complex daily