Doctor's Assessment Included
Every result includes a professional assessment from a BIG-registered doctor. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Leukocytes: Normal Values and What a High Count Means
White blood cell monitoring is especially relevant for seniors, as immune function naturally changes with age. Regular testing helps detect infections early and ensures your immune system remains capable of protecting your health as you age.
Results within 1–3 working days after your blood draw (estimate)
Reference Ranges
Reference ranges may vary between laboratories. When you order a test, a BIG-registered doctor assesses your personal results in context. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Check your own valueWhat It Measures
Leukocytes are your white blood cells: the cells of your immune system. This test measures how many white blood cells are circulating in your blood in total.
There are five different types, each with its own job: neutrophils (mainly against bacteria), lymphocytes (mainly against viruses, and for immune memory), monocytes (clean-up cells), eosinophils (allergy and parasites) and basophils (allergic reactions).
The total leukocyte value tells you how many immune cells there are, but not which ones. That requires a differential, in which the five types are counted separately. Your doctor uses that breakdown to judge what is going on.
Why It Matters
A raised leukocyte count (leukocytosis) often fits a bacterial infection or inflammation. Tissue damage, surgery, physical stress, smoking and the use of corticosteroids can also raise the count. After hard training the value can rise temporarily without anything being wrong.
A reduced count (leukopenia) makes you more susceptible to infection. It can arise from certain viral infections, medication, an autoimmune condition or reduced production in the bone marrow.
The total only takes on meaning alongside the differential. A raised total driven mainly by neutrophils points in a different direction from one driven mainly by lymphocytes. Your doctor therefore always assesses the result together with your symptoms and the rest of your blood count.
When to Test
Leukocytes are measured as standard in the complete blood count. That is often done for fever, a suspected infection, inflammation, or general symptoms whose cause your doctor is looking for.
The value is also useful to follow with recurring infections, during a treatment that can affect white cell production, or when an abnormal count was found before.
The count fluctuates through the day and rises temporarily after exertion and stress. A single mild deviation therefore says little; your doctor looks at the picture over time and at your symptoms.
Symptoms
Low Levels
High Levels
Lifestyle Tips
A resilient immune system mainly needs rest, good hand hygiene and a varied diet. Enough sleep and a good balance between training and recovery help limit unnecessary fluctuation.
Smoking structurally raises the white cell count; stopping lets the value fall again over time.
A single mild deviation is often harmless and resolves on a repeat measurement. A persistently high or low count should be assessed by a doctor, particularly alongside fever, unintended weight loss or recurring infections.