Correction it is the blood picture, the elephant of the elephant, not the item of the item. If you go to see a doctor for a cold, fever, cough, diarrhea, or other illness that inflames a certain area of the body, the doctor will have the patient tested for routine blood work. After seeing the routine blood results, the doctor often says that the patient has a high blood count, an unusually high blood count or a low blood count, a normal blood count. Routine blood count, also called blood count, is a test that counts blood cells, including red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, as well as other indicators in the blood. Blood count usually refers to the total number of white blood cells, neutrophil count and neutrophil ratio in the routine blood test. If the three indicators are elevated, it is called high blood count; if the elevation is obvious, the doctor will say the blood count is high; if it is normal or decreasing, it is called not high blood count; if they are all normal, it is called normal blood count. A high or very high blood count is often indicative of a bacterial infection.