Nutrition Health Chat: Tuesday, Dec. 8th, 5-6 PM Eastern. Learn how vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients affect your health. Free live Q&A. Join us!
Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
Animal Health – General  (Expert Forum)
 | 
Low platelet count, high WBC, and staph infection of skin
This forum is for general pet health questions, such as questions about medications, parasites, vaccines, infectious diseases, breed specific and genetic problems.

Low platelet count, high WBC, and staph infection of skin

by aggierodeo08, Jun 30, 2009 10:13PM
Was wanting to know if  these CBC results could be expected with a mild staph infection of the skin or could it be indicative of another problem.  Dog has been more lethargic lately, less appetant, and diarrhea began the night before CBC was run, but does not behave ill otherwise.  Owner attributed the decrease in appetite and lack of eneergy to heat, but was now more concerned with the unexpected abnormalities in the CBC results.  
Type of Animal
:  
Canine
Age of Animal
:  
2 years
Sex of Animal
:  
Male
Breed of Animal
:  
Labrador Retriever
Last date your pet was examined by a vet?
:  
June 10, 2009
City
:  
College Station
State/Province
:  
Texas
Country
:  
US
Blood Test Results
:  
RBC: 7.27 M/microL
HCT: 49.5%
HGB: 16.7 g/dL
MCV: 68.2 fL
MCH: 23.01 pg
MCHC: 33.8 g/dL
RDW: 16.6%
%RETIC: 0.6%
RETIC: 41.1 K/microL
WBC: 21.26 K/microL  **HIGH** normal:5.5-16.9
%NEU: 78.2%
%LYM: 11.5%
%MONO: 8.5%
%EOS: 1.2%
%BASO: 0.6%
NEU: 16.63 K/microL  **HIGH** normal: 2.00-12.00
LYM: 2.44 K/microL
MONO: 1.81 K/microL
EOS: 0.25 K/microL
BASO: 0.13 K/microL  **HIGH** normal: 0.00-0.10
PLT: 95 K/microL  ***LOW***  normal: 175-500
MPV: 9.48fL
PDW: 17.9%
PCT: 0.1%
X-Ray Results
:  
n/a
Other pertinent test results
:  
approx 1 month ago skin cytology indicated staph infection.  Unknown cause.  B/W was run to practice using new equipment so abnormal results were not expected.  
Member Comments (3)

by Kimberly Coyner, D.V.M., DACVD, Jul 01, 2009 09:37AM
To: aggierodeo08
No, a mild staph infection would not be expected to cause a high white cell count or low plately count (nor a basophilia). I have seen high white cell counts in dogs with severe long standing deep pyoderma or severe demodex. I would suspect stress or systemic illness as the cause for the elevated white cell count, and with the elevated basos, a fecal exam for parasites and heartworm check are indicated. The low platelet count is a concern, and could indicate tick borne disease, or ITP, HOWEVER--if this CBC was run in house, I highly recommend rechecking it with a reference lab such as TAMU, Antech or IDEXX before jumping to any conclusions at all, I have found that the in house machines have issues with accuracy. You have an excellent vet teaching hospital in your town, please don't hestitate to call them and benefit from their knowledge as well, this forum is designed more for pet owners to ask questions about their pets.
Kimberly Coyner, DVM DACVD

by aggierodeo08, Jul 01, 2009 03:09PM
To: Kimberly Coyner, DVM DACVD
Thank you for the reply.  And I am the owner, I'm just a vet-tech.  We did just get new equipment (IDEXX vetlyte, lasercyte and then we've had the vet test machine) and the only reason blood work was run on the dog was because we needed a guinea pig so the IDEXX rep could show us how to use it.  The vet I work for wasn't too concerened until I noticed the skin infection which we just treated (and cleared up) in early June.  So we re-ran the CBC and the WBC, baso and neutro counts were still elevated and the platelet count within the normal range, but on the low side (around 110 I believe, I left the report at work).  We also checked his electrolytes and the pH was slightly elevated, but not much, and ran a general health panel which returned all normal values.  A 3dx snap test was negative for e. canis, lyme and heartworms and the fecal was also negative.  I posted on here because I just wanted to know if my concerns were valid, which my boss assured me they were and told me pretty much the exact same thing you did.  I guess I just wanted to make sure I wasn't overreacting before I took my dog up to work to be checked out.  
Thanks again for the reply!
Lindsey

by Kimberly Coyner, D.V.M., DACVD, Jul 01, 2009 05:20PM
To: aggierodeo08
Thank you for the additional info, sounds like you are on the right track, I would make sure the platelets are not clumped, causing a falsely low reading; good luck with your dog!
Kimberly Coyner, DVM DACVD
Related discussions
RSS Expert Activity
In the ER: Coffee, anyone?
10 hrs ago by Jon Geller, D.V.M.
My animal blogs! 
12 hrs ago by Justine Lee, D.V.M., DACVECC
Prevention Gains Momentum: Your Gui... 
Nov 29 by Lee Kirksey, MD