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[link] summarizes the various kinds of agglutination assays discussed in this section.
Mechanisms of Select Antibody-Antigen Assays | ||
---|---|---|
Type of Assay | Mechanism | Example |
Agglutination | Direct: Antibody is used to clump bacterial cells or other large structures | Serotyping bacteria |
Indirect: Latex beads are coupled with antigen or antibody to look for antibody or antigen, respectively, in patient serum | Confirming the presence of rheumatoid factor (IgM-binding Ig) in patient serum | |
Hemagglutination | Direct: Some bacteria and viruses cross-link red blood cells and clump them together | Diagnosing influenza, mumps, and measles |
Direct Coombs’ test (DAT): Detects nonagglutinating antibodies or complement proteins on red blood cells in vivo | Checking for maternal antibodies binding to neonatal red blood cells | |
Indirect Coombs’ test (IAT): Screens an individual for antibodies against red blood cell antigens (other than the A and B antigens) that are unbound in a patient’s serum in vitro | Performing pretransfusion blood testing | |
Viral hemagglutination inhibition: Uses antibodies from a patient to inhibit viral agglutination | Diagnosing various viral diseases by the presence of patient antibodies against the virus | |
Blood typing and cross-matching: Detects ABO, Rh, and minor antigens in the blood | Matches donor blood to recipient immune requirements |
In the major cross-match, we mix ________ with the donor red blood cells and look for agglutination.
patient serum
Coombs’ reagent is an antiserum with antibodies that bind to human ________.
immunoglobulins/antibodies and/or complement
Explain why the titer of a direct hemagglutination assay is the highest dilution that still causes hemagglutination, whereas in the viral hemagglutination inhibition assay, the titer is the highest dilution at which hemagglutination is not observed.
Why would a doctor order a direct Coombs’ test when a baby is born with jaundice?
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