Selected article for: "lymphocyte count and neutrophil count"

Author: Min Cao; Dandan Zhang; Youhua Wang; Yunfei Lu; Xiangdong Zhu; Ying Li; Honghao Xue; Yunxiao Lin; Min Zhang; Yiguo Sun; Zongguo Yang; Jia Shi; Yi Wang; Chang Zhou; Yidan Dong; Ping Liu; Steven M Dudek; Zhen Xiao; Hongzhou Lu; Longping Peng
Title: Clinical Features of Patients Infected with the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Shanghai, China
  • Document date: 2020_3_6
  • ID: dmud2zf7_22
    Snippet: Compared with the non-ICU patients, patients admitted to the ICU were more likely to have increased neutrophil count (15.8% vs 5.2%), decreased lymphocyte count (84.2% vs 0.6%), increased prothrombin time (26.3% vs 7.4%), increased APTT (42.1% vs 15.3), increased fibrinogen (78.9% vs 52.8%) and.....
    Document: Compared with the non-ICU patients, patients admitted to the ICU were more likely to have increased neutrophil count (15.8% vs 5.2%), decreased lymphocyte count (84.2% vs 0.6%), increased prothrombin time (26.3% vs 7.4%), increased APTT (42.1% vs 15.3), increased fibrinogen (78.9% vs 52.8%) and

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