hard skin or callouses on hands?
In medicine, segs are segmented neutrophils.
relative humidity
Relative Reaction is how cool your best friend is!
The abbreviation for relative humidity is RH.
relative atomic mass
Speed must be specified relative to something. Relative to the Sun, the speed of Earth is about 30 km/second. Relative to the Milky Way, or relative to the Local Group, you would get different numbers.
"Segs" in hematology refer to segmented neutrophils, which are a type of white blood cell involved in the body's immune response. They are called "segs" because of their segmented, multi-lobed nucleus. Segs play a key role in fighting infections and are an important component of the immune system.
Abs segs deal with blood cell counts and deal with bacterial infection fighting but are completly unrelated to liver enzymes
Segs are more mature neutrophils (a type of white blood cell involved in preventing bacterial infection). Bands are more immature. Increased segs and bands (particularly bands) are often concerning for an acute (bacterial) infection
Low segs means that a person has a low number of "segmented neutrophils." These are the most abundant white blood cells that attack infection and inflammation.
low neutrophils
lower-right abdominal pain, at least that gave me those same results...
a berson who liges segs 2 much. t, spurdo
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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.
Polys (polymorphonuclear leukocytes) and segs (segmented neutrophils) refer to different stages of neutrophil development within the immune system. Polys typically refer to mature neutrophils characterized by a segmented nucleus, while segs specifically denote the fully mature neutrophils with a multi-lobed nucleus. In clinical contexts, the terms are often used interchangeably, but they can have subtle distinctions based on the developmental stage being referenced.
It really depends on the type of leukemia. But there are several generalizations one can make across the board for all types. Leukemia reflects an unregulated accumulation of immature cells in the bone marrow and lymph tissue. WBC's typically >50,000 per cubic millimeter Shift to the Left # Acute myelocytic leukemia - increased blasts, increased pros and increased segs # Acute lymphocytic leukemia - Increased L-blasts, increased L-pros and no increased segs # Chronic myelocytic leukemia - presence of metas or myelos and increased segs # Chronic lymphocytic leukemia - presence of metas or myelos and no increased segs There are the basics.
white blood cell