How to Reduce High Acidophilic Cell Counts?
High eosinophil levels require control of the underlying disease. Once the underlying disease is cured, eosinophil levels will decrease and gradually recover. Elevated eosinophil levels may be associated with parasitic infections, allergic diseases such as asthma and skin allergies, eosinophilia, and blood diseases. Patients need active treatment, and during treatment, they should pay attention to their physical condition, maintain a reasonable diet, rest well, increase exercise appropriately, eat light food, eat more vegetables and fruits, and avoid spicy food.
1. Allergic diseases, including bronchial asthma, urticaria, drug and food allergies, and angioneurotic edema.
2. Parasitic diseases, especially larger worms parasitizing in the intestine, such as ascariasis and ancylostomiasis, as well as parasites parasitizing in organs and tissues outside the intestine, such as schistosomiasis, paragonimiasis, filariasis, and cysticercosis.
3. Certain skin diseases, such as eczema, exfoliative dermatitis, pemphigus, and psoriasis, can cause mild to moderate increases in eosinophil levels.
4. Infectious diseases, during the convalescent period of infectious diseases and the acute phase of scarlet fever, eosinophil levels may increase slightly.
5. Hematological diseases, such as eosinophilic leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia, malignant lymphoma, multiple myeloma, post-splenectomy, and polycythemia vera.
6. Other diseases, including rheumatic diseases, hypofunction of the anterior pituitary lobe, and adrenal hypofunction, which are often accompanied by increased eosinophil levels.
Generally, in the early stages of acute infectious diseases and after long-term treatment with adrenocortical hormones, the inhibition of histamine synthesis can indirectly lead to a decrease in eosinophil levels.