Percentages on the WBC's are not as informative as absolute counts, because the percentages only tell you how many of each type you have relative to the other types of WBC's. This is much less significant than actual number of each type of WBC.
Did the results list the absolute count on each of the WBC types?
More info on WBC test results:
labtestsonline.org/understanding/analytes/differential/tab/test/According to
www.drrind.com/therapies/thyroid-scale , the T3 Uptake test is bogus:
"* T3 Uptake: This test is mentioned only as a warning not to use it. In fact, it does not measure T3 levels at all – the name is misleading. It is an old test designed with a purpose of indirectly measuring T4!
It was developed before we were able to accurately measure T4 levels. The assumption was that if the patient had a high T4 level, the blood proteins would be saturated with it. Therefore when mixed with T3 (which is easier to measure), the blood proteins would take up very little T3.
Thus a low T3 uptake implies elevated T4 levels and vice versa. Thus the T3 Uptake test is actually an antiquated, inaccurate way to measure T4 levels."
More info about
thyroid issues:
www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/