The postnatal checkup is more important for the recovery of the mother's body, so after the postnatal period you need to go back to the hospital in time to do a review, and the review needs to take the child with you, and the review project is more, including the routine blood test. So what is the postnatal blood test, how to treat the postnatal blood high? The white blood cells can be increased or decreased, and the increase in white blood cells suggests that there is a bacterial infection or a hematologic disease. If the red blood cell is abnormal, the red blood cell increase, consider the acute hemolytic disease or pathological increase. If the hemoglobin is abnormal, the lower the hemoglobin, the more severe the anemia. If the platelet test is abnormal, the main consideration is blood system diseases, leukemia or hypersplenism and other diseases.
Routine blood tests are tests that determine the condition of the blood and the presence or absence of other diseases by observing the changes in the number of blood cells and their morphology and distribution. Blood tests generally include red blood cell count, white blood cell count and white blood cell count, hemoglobin level and platelet count. Many patients can have routine blood tests to assist in the diagnosis of the disease when the cause of the disease is unknown. Routine blood tests are also a common indicator for observing the effect of treatment, using or stopping medication, continuing or stopping treatment, and the recurrence or recovery of the disease. Under normal circumstances, the blood count is 4-10 times 10 to the 9th power, and the percentage of neutrophils is 50-70%. When the white blood cell count is greater than 10, with or without the percentage of neutrophils greater than 70%, it is called "high blood", which is usually seen in Staphylococcus aureus, Diplococcus pneumoniae, Gram-negative bacilli, anaerobic bacilli, and other organisms, Gram-negative bacilli, anaerobes, and other bacterial infections.
If the bacterial infection causes high white blood cells, you can see the neutrophils increase, C-reactive protein increases at the same time, then you need to give your baby antibiotics, and if the condition is serious, you need to use intravenous drugs. If it is a viral infection that causes the leukocytes to increase, you can see in the blood routine that the neutrophils are in the normal range or lower, while the lymphocytes increase, the monocytes can also increase, and the C-reactive protein is normal or slightly higher, in this case, there is no need for antibacterial drugs. Most viral infections have a tendency to heal on their own and only require symptomatic treatment.