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Serological Information

Serology is the scientific study of blood serum and other bodily fluids. In practice, the term usually refers to the diagnostic identification of antibodies in the serum.[1] Such antibodies are typically formed in response to an infection (against a given microorganism),[2] against other foreign proteins (in response, for example, to a mismatched blood transfusion), or to one's own proteins (in instances of autoimmune disease).

Serological tests may be performed for diagnostic purposes when an infection is suspected, in rheumatic illnesses, and in many other situations, such as checking an individual's blood type.[1] Serology blood tests help to diagnose patients with certain immune deficiencies associated with the lack of antibodies, such as X-linked agammaglobulinemia. In such cases, tests for antibodies will be consistently negative.

There are several serology techniques that can be used depending on the antibodies being studied. These include: ELISA, agglutination, precipitation, complement-fixation, and fluorescent antibodies.

Some serological tests are not limited to blood serum, but can also be performed on other bodily fluids such as semen and saliva, which have (roughly) similar properties to serum.

Serological tests may also be used forensically, generally to link a perpetrator to a piece of evidence (e.g., linking a rapist to a semen sample).

Contents

Serological surveys

Serological surveys are often used by epidemiologists to determine the prevalence of a disease in a population. Such surveys are sometimes performed by random, anonymous sampling from samples taken for other medical tests.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ryan KJ, Ray CG (editors) (2004). Sherris Medical Microbiology (4th ed.). McGraw Hill. pp. 247–9. ISBN 0838585299.
  2. ^ Washington JA (1996). Principles of Diagnosis: Serodiagnosis. in: Baron's Medical Microbiology (Baron S et al., eds.) (4th ed.). Univ of Texas Medical Branch. ISBN 0-9631172-1-1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mmed.section.5462.

External links

Medicine: Pathology
Principles of pathology

Disease/Medical condition (Infection, Neoplasia) · Hemodynamics (Ischemia) · Inflammation · Wound healing

Cell death: Necrosis (Liquefactive necrosis, Coagulative necrosis, Caseous necrosis, Fat necrosis) · Apoptosis · Pyknosis · Karyorrhexis · Karyolysis

Cellular adaptation: Atrophy · Hypertrophy · Hyperplasia · Dysplasia · Metaplasia (Squamous, Glandular)

accumulations: pigment (Hemosiderin, Lipochrome/Lipofuscin, Melanin) · Steatosis
Anatomical pathology Surgical pathology · Cytopathology · Autopsy · Molecular pathology · Forensic pathology · Dental pathology Gross examination · Histopathology · Immunohistochemistry · Electron microscopy · Immunofluorescence · Fluorescent in situ hybridization
Clinical pathology Clinical chemistry · Hematopathology · Transfusion medicine · Medical microbiology · Diagnostic immunology · Immunopathology Enzyme assay · Mass spectrometry · Chromatography · Flow cytometry · Blood bank · Microbiological culture · Serology
Specific conditions Myocardial infarction
Operations/surgeries and other procedures of the hemic and lymphatic system (ICD-9-CM V3 40-41)
Lymphatic system Lymphadenectomy · Neck dissection · Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection
Bone marrow and spleen Stem cell transplantation/Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation · Splenectomy
Imaging Lymphogram
Immunologic techniques and tests · serology/ diagnostic immunology
Immunoprecipitation Chromatin immunoprecipitation · Immunodiffusion (Ouchterlony double immunodiffusion, Radial immunodiffusion, Immunoelectrophoresis, Counterimmunoelectrophoresis)
Immunoassay ELISA · ELISPOT · Enzyme Multiplied Immunoassay Technique · RAST test · Radioimmunoassay · Immunofluorescence
Agglutination Hemagglutination/Hemagglutinin (Coombs test) · Latex fixation test
Other Nephelometry · Complement fixation test · Immunocytochemistry · Immunohistochemistry (Direct fluorescent antibody) · Epitope mapping · Skin allergy test · Patch test

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Medical test: Serology, reference range: Clinical biochemistry blood tests (including BMP, CMP)
Fluid/electrolytes

electrolytes (Na+/K+, Cl-/HCO3-) · renal function, BUN-to-creatinine ratio (BUN/Creatinine) · Ca

derived values: Plasma osmolality · Serum osmolal gap
Acid-base Arterial blood gas · Base excess · Anion gap · CO2 content
Nutrition Iron tests: Transferrin saturation = Serum iron / Total iron-binding capacity; Ferritin · Transferrin · Transferrin receptor
Endocrine

ACTH stimulation test · Thyroid function tests (TSH)

Blood sugar: Glucose test · C-peptide · Fructosamine · Glycated hemoglobin
Metabolic Blood lipids
Cardiovascular Cardiac marker: Troponin test · CPK-MB test · LDH · Myoglobin · Glycogen phosphorylase isoenzyme BB
Digestive

Liver function tests: protein tests (Human serum albumin, Serum total protein) · ALP · transaminases (ALT, AST, AST/ALT ratio) · Bilirubin (Unconjugated, Conjugated)

Amylase · Lipase (Pancreatic lipase)

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Categories: Clinical pathology | Serology | Blood tests | Epidemiology

 

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