Eosinophilia (original) (raw)

The main functions of eosinophils include involvement in defence against parasites, allergic responses, tissue inflammation and immunity. Eosinophilia is a peripheral eosinophil count greater than the upper limit of normal range, usually around 0.50 x 109/L. In many cases the cause is clear - eg, atopic disease. However, the differential diagnosis includes many serious diseases, including malignancy.

Based on the counts, eosinophilia can subdivide into different categories: mild (0.50-1.5 x109, moderate (1.5-5.0 x109), and severe (> 5.0 x109).1

There are heterogeneous manifestations of the disease with severity varying from mild to end-organ damage. Skin, pulmonary, and gastrointestinal organ systems are commonly involved. Constitutional symptoms like low-grade fevers, night sweats, fatigue, weight loss can occur in multiple conditions.

Comprehensive history taking and thorough physical examination are extremely important, and sometimes enough, for diagnosis.

Investigation is guided by the history, examination, and clinical picture and may include:

Prognosis can vary from mild disease to fatal outcome, depending on multiple factors like the cause of the eosinophilia, the presence of organ damage, the subtype of eosinophilia, and the timeliness of appropriate medical treatment. Eosinophils can produce proinflammatory cytokines and contain proteolytic enzymes that can damage the host cell wall, so tissue damage can occur if eosinophilia is not treated appropriately.

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