Well then, that certainly carries more weight and so the situation should certainly be investigated as they recommended - but that doesn't necessarily mean that something very bad will be uncovered. There are various other possibilities besides blood cancers - and probably some immune conditions are more likely than cancer.
Keep in mind that a doctor always has to consider the worst possibilities, but that doesn't mean at all that the worst possibilities are the most likely. Good luck.
No - it was not an automatic message computer generated on the CBC report. It was a telephone call from the specialty doctor that I had seen recommending that I go to my primary care ASAP.
Hi, was that message automatically computer-generated on the CBC report?
Probably your slightly elevated counts would not be much cause for alarm - except that the liver enzyme being elevated might suggest a blood disorder. I'd just call your family doc and ask if you should come in or not. If you have chronically elevated AP (from a liver problem or a medication, etc), then that might just be confusing the reason for the rise in WBCs.
I believe that neutrophils contain AP. Maybe the rise in neuts was enough to just push your AP into the high range, just guessing.