Basophils (%) shows the share of basophils among white blood cells, offering context for allergies and inflammation.
This is the share of your white blood cells that are basophils, given as a percentage. Basophils release histamine during allergic and inflammatory reactions.
The percentage comes from the differential part of a complete blood count and is best read next to the absolute basophil count.
The basophil percentage is normally very small. A raised value can appear in allergic and inflammatory conditions and, less often, in certain blood disorders. Because a percentage shifts whenever another cell type changes, it is interpreted together with the absolute count.
Aniva reads your result against research-backed ranges, not just the lab's wide normal. The reference shown below is specific to this biomarker.
Typical adult range, automated differential:
| Measure | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Basophils, percent of WBC | 0 to 2 % |
Ranges are guidance only and vary by laboratory and analyser. Read against your lab's own reference range, aligned to German practice (DGKL).
You learn what proportion of your white cells are basophils. With the absolute count and the rest of the differential, it helps point toward an allergic or inflammatory process.
The percentage moves when any other white cell type rises or falls, and small absolute changes look large here. Allergic and inflammatory conditions raise it. Delays before analysis can affect the result.
Best read with the absolute basophil count and the other differential percentages, since they all add up to 100 percent of the white cells.
What does Basophils (%) tell me? It shows the share of basophils among your white blood cells, helping interpret allergy or inflammation patterns.
What can affect my result? Recent infections, allergic flares, corticosteroids, estrogen therapy, lithium, stress, pregnancy, intense exercise, and dehydration can shift values.
Do I need to fast? No. Fasting is not required for this test.
How often should I test this? Usually when a clinician orders a CBC. If results are unexpected, a repeat in a few weeks may be suggested.
How long do results take? Results are usually ready in about 7 days.
What should I discuss with my clinician? Symptoms, allergies, recent illnesses, medicines and supplements, thyroid history, and prior CBC results.
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