Is that a urine sample? Breast milk? Unable to evaluate without knowing what you're looking at.
"hpf" in this case stands for high powered field. The normal level is 1-3 red blood cells per microscopy view on high power.
The normal RBC count in urine is - 4 RBC/HPF RBC -red blood corpuscle HPF - high power field
5-10/hpf
It is actually very normal to have some pus, or dead white blood cells, in a person's stool. This by itself is not cause for concern.
That means you have an increase of white blood cells in your urine, it could mean you have an infection in your gential area, seek professional help.
HPF stands for high power field, a microscopy term. For instance, if I see more than five white blood cells when looking through the 40x lens at a vaginal wet smear, I might write "WBC >5/HPF."
no
>50 red blood cells per high-power field [RBCs/HPF]) on a single urinalysis (UA)
Having white blood cells present in the urine is not cause for alarm if no other symptoms are present. If there are other symptoms, then a doctor should be consulted to see about the possibility of a UTI.
RBC: 1-3 HPF WBC: 6-8 HPF Bacteria: Abundant
1 to 10/HPF is normal
1-2/hpf