The absolute first thing that I would always think of when I see low white blood cells is copper.
So, generally copper deficiency at its most sensitive is going to cause neutropenia; which is low neutrophils, but it can cause low white blood cells across the board. I'm not saying there aren't other things, but that's going to be the number one thing that I jump to first when looking for low white blood cells.
Solutions, well, I'm not going to assuming it's copper. What I'm going to say is, do we have copper here? So, the first thing is testing serum copper, or serum ceruloplasmin. Which are the two most important markers of copper status.
Is the individual eating copper-rich foods?
Top Tier: Liver, oysters, shitake mushrooms, spirulina, and cocoa powder.
Second Tier: All other organ meats other than liver, all other mushrooms besides shitake, all other shellfish besides oysters.
Third Tier: Legumes, and potatoes.
First I want to know if they are eating any of the top two tier copper-rich foods. If the answer is no, then I'm not going to wait on the serum copper and serum ceruloplasmin.
I would suggest increasing the copper-rich foods because there is absolutely no harm in modifying the foods you eat to ensure you’re getting some in there.
You don't really need the testing to do that. But I would definitely get the testing before I would start doing any bigger interventions than that. For example, I'm not going to start that person on a copper supplement if I don't have good data backing up copper deficiency.
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