A low monocyte count has no clinical significance and does not indicate whether the organism is suffering from a corresponding pathologic disease.
Monocytes are a type of leukocyte, which are less abundant in the blood, with a normal value of (0.12~1.0)×10^9/L. Decrease in monocyte count has no special clinical significance, and most of the time it is caused by physiological decrease, which can be restored to the normal value by itself, and does not need to be treated for the time being.
Elevated monocyte count can be seen in tuberculosis infection (tuberculosis, etc.), viral infection (EBV, cytomegalovirus infection, etc.), malaria, acute mononuclear cell leukemia, etc., and it is necessary to go to the Department of Hematology in time to complete the relevant examinations to determine the specific causes of the disease, and then to treat the cause of the disease.