Blood in the urine can be caused by infection, stones, cancer, and many other causes. Follow up with your health care provider to make sure that the cause is not something serious.
I'm not quite sure what you mean by "swollen exterior," but a high white blood cell count in the urine usually means either (1) a bladder infection, or (2) a kidney infection. Both these conditions need the attention of a doctor.
Do you mean a high basophil count? Basophils are white blood cells and the count may be high in allergic conditions such as asthma, hay fever, after a bee sting or as a response to infection.
Increased numbers of white blood cells in urine are usually a sign of a urinary tract infection or other renal diseases. White blood cells are a normal component in the secretions of the male and female genital tracts and can be present in normal urine with concentrations of 0 to 8 cells per high-power field. Some laboratories culture urine with >5 white blood cells per high-power field to rule out a urinary tract infection.
If you have a high white blood cell count it could mean any number of things that you need to see Your Local Medical Doctor about very soon
A white blood cell count of 30,000 is way too high. A normal count is between 4,000 and 10,000. Your doctor will likely run more tests to determine why your count is so high.
UECR stands for Urine Erythrocyte Count, which is a blood test that measures the number of red blood cells in the urine. This test helps in diagnosing conditions such as urinary tract infections, kidney stones, or kidney disease.
White blood cells in the urine are an indication of an infection or inflammation in the urinary system. Generally, the number of WBCs is what determines the diagnosis. Pyelonephritis and urinary tract infections can both cause white blood cells in the urine.
High segs on a blood test is an elevated neutrophil count. It means that a bacterial infection is present in your body. High abs means you have an elevated white blood cell count and infection or leukemia is present.
It could mean that you are struggling with some sort of infection.
If you mean like high amount of urine: Polyuria. If you mean like high amount of particles inside the urine: High specific gravity = your urine may have high levels of glucose, protein, bilirubin, urobilinogen, or/and a lot of mucus, crystals, bacteria, and tissue/blood cells.
This can mean a number of things... Infection Chronic bone marrow disease Leukaemia Tissue damage e.g. burns
nope. just urine that was in ur urethera, nothing more nothing less