Is a monocyte count of 0.95 serious?

A monocyte count of 0.95 x 10^9/L is within the range of normal values and is normal.
Normal human monocyte count is (0.1~1.0)×10^9/L, so a monocyte count of 0.95×10^9/L is within the range of normal values and is a normal indication. Monocyte is one kind of white blood cell classification, and it is also the largest type of cell in human blood.
Decreased monocyte count usually has no special clinical significance; while increased monocytes can be seen in typhoid fever, tuberculosis infection (tuberculosis, etc.), malaria (Plasmodium infection), etc., and the elevation of monocytes caused by these etiologies is mostly mild.
If the monocytes are significantly elevated, it is necessary to consider the possibility of acute monocytic leukemia, acute granulomonocytic leukemia, chronic granulomonocytic leukemia, and these patients need to go to the Department of Hematology in time for a bone marrow aspiration examination to make a clear diagnosis and active treatment.
Specific disease diagnosis and treatment should be carried out under the guidance of a physician.