Quote Originally Posted by Gorilla's Gal
I work in the medical field and have smoked for 28 years. I do know that high levels of THC with a chronic smoker WILL NOT cause an increase WBC count. A high white blood cell count is a sign of infection and is also a sign to go to a physician for blood work. Not something to mess around with.
That's true, G. G.
However, the rejection was for a Low WBC, yah?

That does not signify infection, but it does show a risk of infection.
Hence the rejection.

Happens alla time and is transient.

Bottom line, don't do your meds for 21 days and re-test if that makes you comfortable.
Then if your white count is significantly low, it's a symptom, investigate.

Disclaimer:
I do not even play a doctor on TV.
For valid medical advise, see a real doctor.

Aloha,

Ah, Clem
Gypsy doctor, :rastasmoke:
(No shoes)
Weezard Reviewed by Weezard on . Any medical professionals here? I was scheduled for surgery to remove a small kidney stone tomorrow, went in for blood work and all that earlier this week, got a call this morning: surgery canceled b/c Iā??m low on white blood cells. I didnā??t make the connection at first, and when I did I still didnā??t think anything of it b/c Iā??d never heard of this effect, but I hopped on google (yahoo, actually) anyway, and it looks like I found the problemā?¦ our favorite hobby. Iā??ve been smoking very small amounts 3-5 times a Rating: 5