Top answers from doctors based on your search:
How to reduce eosinophils naturally
A 28-year-old male asked:

Dr. Richard Wassermananswered
Allergy and Immunology 46 years experience
Maybe: 9% eosinophils is usually somewhat high but is not a problem by itself. High eosinophils can occur with allergy (nasal allergy, asthma, eczema) or a p... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
5.2k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 42-year-old female asked:

Dr. Gurmukh Singhanswered
Pathology 51 years experience
May be no need to: All laboratory results need to be interpreted in the clinical context and the doctor who ordered the tests is usually in the best position to do that.... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
1.9k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 48-year-old female asked:

Dr. Warren Wolfeanswered
Family Medicine 60 years experience
Need more info: The physician who is treating you is the best person to give you the answer to your questions as there are a lot of other things that come into play. ... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
2.5k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 20-year-old female asked:

Dr. Dean Giannoneanswered
Internal Medicine 27 years experience
Eosinophils: An eosinophil is a type of white blood cell. It's specifically responsible for responding to allergic and parasitic triggers.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
1.2k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 45-year-old female asked:

Dr. Gregory Cowananswered
15 years experience
Yes: Yes. That is a normal value.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
3.8k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 34-year-old member asked:

Dr. Jeffrey Satinoveranswered
Psychiatry 41 years experience
Allergy: Lots of eos means allergy or asthma, usually. Control these and the eo count should decrease. It's most important to control the cause.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
5.2k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 45-year-old member asked:

Dr. Ed Friedlanderanswered
Pathology 46 years experience
Nothing: I would draw no conclusion whatsoever from a random finding of an eosinophil count below the reference range. It's an obsolete marker for hypercortiso... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
4.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 33-year-old member asked:

Dr. James Ballanswered
Pediatric Hematology and Oncology 21 years experience
CBC + differential: CBC will tell the white blood cell count. The differential tells the percentage of different cell types that make up the white blood cell count. Eos... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
5.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 46-year-old member asked:

Dr. Michael Thompsonanswered
Hematology and Oncology 22 years experience
Allergy vs other...: Eosinophils may be elevated due to allergic conditions, or (more common outside of the us) due to parasites.
Eosinophils associated with cancer or bon... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
5.9k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 34-year-old member asked:

Dr. Ed Friedlanderanswered
Pathology 46 years experience
Usually nothing: A bit of stress will drive them down, or if it's a small-sample count, there just didn't happen to be one among the first hundred or few hundred count... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
4.9k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
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