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Lymphocytes (LYMPH)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Differential White Cell Percentage - Key Immune Pattern in Viral Illness, Autoimmunity & Hematologic Disorders)

Synonyms

  • Lymphocyte percentage
  • Lymphocyte fraction
  • Lymph%
  • Lymphocyte proportion
  • Relative lymphocyte count
  • Differential lymphocyte percentage

Units of Measurement

  • %
  • Proportion of 1.0
  • Fraction

Unit Conversions

Percentage → Fraction

\text{Fraction} = \frac{\text{%}}{100}

Fraction → Percentage

\text{%} = \text{Fraction} \times 100

Example:
30% = 0.30 fraction
0.15 fraction = 15%

Description

Lymphocyte percentage (LYMPH%) is the relative proportion of lymphocytes among all white blood cells in the differential count.

It provides:

  • Insight into immune balance
  • Clues to infection types
  • Key information when absolute lymphocyte count (ALC) is interpreted alongside WBC count

Lymphocytes include:

  • T cells (CD4, CD8)
  • B cells
  • NK cells

Physiological Role

Lymphocytes are central to:

  • Adaptive immunity
  • Antibody production
  • Viral clearance
  • Tumor surveillance
  • Immune memory

LYMPH% helps identify physiological vs pathological shifts in immune response.

Clinical Significance

HIGH LYMPH%

(Percent is high even if absolute count may be normal)

1. Viral Infections - Most Common

  • EBV (infectious mononucleosis)
  • CMV
  • Viral hepatitis
  • Influenza
  • Adenovirus
  • Early HIV
  • COVID-19 recovery phase

2. Chronic Infections

  • Tuberculosis
  • Pertussis

3. Autoimmune Disorders

  • Hashimoto thyroiditis
  • Graves disease
  • Rheumatoid arthritis

4. Lymphoproliferative Disorders

  • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)
    • Often very high LYMPH% (60–90%)
  • Lymphomas

5. Stress Recovery / Post-infection rebound

6. Hyperthyroidism

LOW LYMPH%

1. Bacterial Infections

Neutrophilia reduces LYMPH%.

2. Acute Stress Response

  • Trauma
  • Surgery
  • Myocardial infarction

3. Corticosteroid Therapy

Redistribution → low LYMPH%.

4. Immunosuppression

  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiotherapy

5. Sepsis

Marked lymphopenia is a poor prognostic marker.

6. Autoimmune Diseases

  • SLE (commonly low LYMPH%)

7. Protein-energy malnutrition

8. COVID-19

Relative lymphopenia is characteristic.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + WHO + Mayo + ARUP)

Adults

  • 20 – 40%
    (= 0.20 – 0.40 fraction)

Children

Children normally have much higher LYMPH% due to thymic activity.

AgeNormal Range
Newborn20 – 40%
6 months – 2 years40 – 70%
2 – 6 years35 – 60%
>6 years25 – 45%

Patterns to Note

  • High LYMPH% + normal ALC = relative lymphocytosis
  • High LYMPH% + high ALC = viral infection / CLL
  • Low LYMPH% + low ALC = immunodeficiency / sepsis

Diagnostic Uses

1. Infection Patterns

  • Viral illness → high LYMPH%
  • Bacterial illness → low LYMPH%

2. Screening for Immunodeficiency

Low LYMPH% suggests:

  • HIV
  • Primary immunodeficiencies
  • SCID (very low)

3. Hematologic Malignancies

High LYMPH% with atypical cells → CLL/lymphoma.

4. Autoimmune Disorders

Both high and low LYMPH% seen depending on disease/stage.

5. COVID-19

Low LYMPH% correlates with severity.

6. Treatment Monitoring

Used with ALC in patients receiving:

  • Chemotherapy
  • Immunosuppressants
  • Steroids

Analytical Notes

  • Automated analyzers calculate LYMPH% as part of CBC with differential
  • Confirm abnormalities with peripheral smear
  • LYMPH% must always be interpreted with ALC + total WBC
  • Dehydration or hemoconcentration can skew percentages

Clinical Pearls

  • Percentage alone can be misleading - always pair with absolute count.
  • In CLL, LYMPH% often >60% even when WBC is massively elevated.
  • In severe bacterial infections: high neutrophils + very low LYMPH%.
  • Children normally have high LYMPH% - physiologic, not disease.
  • Steroids cause LYMPH% to fall within hours via redistribution.

Interesting Fact

During early childhood, lymphocytes outnumber neutrophils - a physiologic phenomenon known as “lymphocyte predominance phase”, which reverses (“neutrophil predominance”) by around age 5.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Hematology
  2. WHO Hematology Standards
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Differential Count
  4. ARUP Consult - CBC Interpretation
  5. MedlinePlus / NIH - Lymphocyte Count

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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