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. 2022 Jun 9;12:9510. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-12751-y

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Plasma levels of neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, basophils and eosinophils in uninfected non-DM individuals and ICU COVID-19 patients that survived and died. (A) Neutrophils levels in blood from ICU COVID-19 patients that survived and died were significantly higher than that in uninfected controls. Neutrophils levels in blood from ICU COVID-19 that died were also significantly higher than ICU COVID-19 patients that survived. (B) Lymphocytes in blood from ICU COVID-19 patients that survived and died were significantly lower than that in uninfected controls. However, there were no significant difference in blood levels of lymphocytes in ICU COVID-19 patients that survived and died. (C) Monocytes in blood from ICU COVID-19 patients that survived were not significantly different from that in uninfected controls. However, monocytes levels in blood from ICU COVID-19 patients that died were significantly higher than that in uninfected controls and ICU COVID-19 patients that survived. (D) Basophils levels in blood from ICU COVID-19 patients that survived but not died were significantly higher than that in uninfected controls. There was no significant difference in blood basophils levels between ICU COVID-19 patients that died and survived. (E) Eosinophils levels in blood from ICU COVID-19 patients that survived and died were significantly higher than that in uninfected controls. However, there were no significant difference in blood levels of eosinophils in ICU COVID-19 patients that survived and died. Data shown are mean ± S.E.M from n = 30 in uninfected controls (26.6% females), n = 33 died (42.4% females) and n = 32 in survived (37.5% females). Statistical significance levels are shown above data points on each graph.