Does it matter if your blood work indicates inflammation?

A blood test suggesting inflammation usually means high white blood cells, usually a bacterial infection, and needs to be judged on the basis of the patient’s symptoms, signs, medical history, and the results of further tests to determine whether it is important.
Common inflammatory diseases include pelvic inflammatory disease, nephritis, rheumatoid arthritis, pancreatitis, rhinitis, gastritis, and pneumonia. Blood tests that suggest inflammation require further testing to determine which area is inflamed and can be treated specifically for that area.
If the blood white blood cells are high, suggesting inflammation, and there are high fever, chills (fear of cold), cough, cough phlegm, chest tightness, abdominal pain and diarrhea, urinary frequency and urinary pain, etc., you need to go to the hospital in a timely manner, under the guidance of the doctor to standardize the diagnosis and treatment, and to avoid the use of medication alone, in order to avoid delaying the condition.