A simple ratio from your blood count that hints at your body’s inflammation balance.
The platelet to lymphocyte ratio (PLR) is a calculated value, not a separate blood test. It compares the platelet count with the lymphocyte count, both reported in a full blood count.
The formula is: platelet count ÷ lymphocyte count.
Platelets rise and lymphocytes can fall during inflammation, so their balance reflects systemic inflammatory and immune activity. PLR has been studied widely as a marker in cardiovascular disease, autoimmune conditions and cancer.
A higher ratio reflects a more inflammatory state and has been linked with poorer outcomes in several conditions. A lower ratio is generally more favourable.
Aniva reads your result against research-backed ranges, not just the lab's wide normal. The reference shown below is specific to this biomarker.
There is no firmly established healthy reference range for PLR, and values vary by population and assay. It is used mainly as a relative marker, where higher values suggest more inflammation. Interpret as a trend with a clinician rather than against a fixed cutoff.
Platelet and lymphocyte counts shift with infection, stress, corticosteroids and recent illness, so a single value can mislead. PLR is non-specific and rises with many conditions, so it is best read in context and as a trend.
Read with its components, platelet and lymphocyte counts, and alongside the full blood count, neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio and hs-CRP.
What does a high or low PLR mean? High PLR can signal more inflammatory activity or stress. Low PLR may reflect lower platelets or relatively higher lymphocytes. Always interpret with other CBC results.
Do I need to fast for this test? No. Fasting is not required. Staying hydrated and avoiding heavy exercise beforehand can help.
What can affect my PLR result? Smoking, alcohol, strenuous exercise, stress, dehydration, recent vaccination, and medicines like steroids or NSAIDs can shift the ratio.
How often should I check PLR? There’s no set schedule. It’s usually rechecked when monitoring recovery, symptoms, or trends alongside a CBC.
How long do results take? Results are usually ready in about 7 days.
What should I discuss with my clinician? Ask how PLR fits with your CBC, CRP, symptoms, and medications. Discuss whether repeat testing is useful.
One annual membership, 100+ biomarkers, every result explained in plain language with a personalized action plan and concierge guidance.