Calculating an Absolute Neutrophil Count

CBC Components PDF
Calculating an Absolute Neutrophil Count

To calculate your ANC from a percentage differential (%) use this formula:

WBC x (percent of segs + percent of bands)/100 = ANC

Example: If your WBC is 2.0, segs are 14.8% and bands are 5.0% the formula would look like this:

2.0 x (14.8 + 5.0) = 2.0 x 19.8 = 39.6 / 100 = .396         The ANC is 0.396

To calculate your ANC from an absolute differential use this formula:

Absolute segs + Absolute bands = ANC

Example: If your absolute segs are 0.3 and absolute bands are 0.1 the formula would look like this:

0.3 + 0.1 = 0.400         The ANC is 0.400

The table below will explain all the different parts of the CBC and what they mean:

TestNameMeasuring UseReasons for Increase or Decrease
WBCWhite Blood CellTotal number of WBCs (Total of all cells; segmented neutrophils, band neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils)The body uses WBCs to fight infection. Each type has a slightly different job. WBC is measured to make sure there are sufficient numbers, to help detect and monitor conditions that lead to increases or decreases in total WBCs, and/or to increases in one or more types of WBCs. May increase with infections, inflammation, cancer, leukemia; decrease with some medications, some autoimmune conditions, some severe infections, bone marrow failure, congenital marrow aplasia (marrow doesn't develop normally)
ANCAbsolute Neutrophil CountTotal number of Neutrophils and Bands
% NeutrophilSegmented NeutrophilsMeasures the percentage of each type of cellsThis is a dynamic population that varies somewhat from day to day depending on what is going on in the body. Significant increases in particular types are associated with different temporary/acute and/or chronic conditions.
% BandStabs or segment band neutrophils
% LymphsLymphocyte
% MonoMonocyte
% EosEosinophil
% BasoBasophil
NeutrophilSegmented NeutrophilsMeasures the actual number of each type of cell
BandStabs or segment band neutrophils
LymphsLymphocyte
MonoMonocyte
EosEosinophil
BasoBasophil
RBCRed Blood CellTotal number of RBCs per volume of bloodRBCs carry oxygen from your lungs to your tissues. The test measures decreased production, increased loss or increased destruction of RBCs, to detect anemia and sometimes to help detect erythrocytosis (too many RBCs)Decreases with bleeding or destruction; increases when too many are made or retained due to fluid loss resulting from diarrhea, dehydration, burns or illness
HgbHemoglobinTotal amount of oxygen carrying protein inside RBCs
HctHematocritPercentage of blood volume made up of RBCs (solid versus liquid portion of blood)
MCVMean Corpuscular VolumeAverage size of RBCsThe size of RBCs and the average amount of hemoglobin inside them can help classify different types of anemiaIncreases with B12 and folate deficiency, decreases with iron deficiency and thalassemia
MCHMean Corpuscular HemoglobinAverage amount (weight) of hemoglobin inside each RBC
MCHCMean Corpuscular Hemoglobin ConcentrationAverage concentration (%) of hemoglobin inside each RBC
RDWRBC Distribution WidthMeasure variation in size of RBCs. Most normal RBCs are the same sizeHelp classify anemia
PlateletPlateletTotal number of platelets per volume of blood. Platelets are special cell fragments that are important in blood clottingDetermine whether number is adequate to control bleeding
MPVMean Platelet VolumeAverage size of plateletsHelp evaluate decreased platelets