An excess of neutrophils is consistent with several types of bacterial infection. Suppose an adult has x

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An excess of neutrophils is consistent with several types of bacterial infection. Suppose an adult has x neutrophils. How large would x have to be for the probability of a normal adult having x or more neutrophils to be ≤5%? 


Infectious Disease

The differential is a standard measurement made during a blood test. It consists of classifying white blood cells into the following five categories: (1) Basophils, 

(2) Eosinophils, 

(3) Monocytes, 

(4) lymphocytes, and 

(5) Neutrophils. The usual practice is to look at 100 randomly selected cells under a microscope and to count the number of cells within each of the five categories. Assume that a normal adult will have the following proportions of cells in each category: basophils, 0.5%; eosinophils, 1.5%; monocytes, 4%; lymphocytes, 34%; and neutrophils, 60%.

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