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Anti-Mycoplasma Pneumoniae IgG Antibody Kit ELISA

Kit ELISA Mycoplasma pneumoniae , test Colorimetric pour la quantification de Mycoplasma pneumoniae .
N° du produit ABIN996997

Aperçu rapide pour Anti-Mycoplasma Pneumoniae IgG Antibody Kit ELISA (ABIN996997)

Antigène

Tous les produits Anti-Mycoplasma Pneumoniae IgG Antibody
Anti-Mycoplasma Pneumoniae IgG Antibody

Reactivité

  • 4
  • 1
  • 1
Mycoplasma pneumoniae

Méthode de détection

Colorimetric

Type de méthode

Sandwich ELISA

Application

ELISA

Type d'échantillon

Serum
  • Fonction

    Mycoplasma IgG Test System provides a means for the qualitative detection of IgG antibodies to Mycoplasma pneumoniae in human sera. When performed according to these instructions, the results of this test may aid in the diagnosis of M. pneumoniae infections in the adult population, or the determination of the patient’s serological status. Potential cross-reactivity has not been assessed, nor were studies performed on very young and/or elderly patients.

    Analytical Method

    Qualitative

    Specificité

    95%

    Sensibilité

    87.5%
  • Volume d'échantillon

    10 μL

    Durée du test

    1 h

    Plaque

    Pre-coated

    Restrictions

    For Research Use only
  • Stock

    4 °C

    Date de péremption

    12-14 months
  • Antigène Tous les produits Anti-Mycoplasma Pneumoniae IgG Antibody

    Anti-Mycoplasma Pneumoniae IgG Antibody

    Classe de substances

    Antibody

    Sujet

    Mycoplasma pneumoniae is the most common cause of pneumonia and febrile upper- respiratory tract infections in the general population (except for influenza A). Other nonrespiratory complications may also develop with the disease in virtually any organ system, with insult ranging from mild to life-threatening Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a prokaryote, is the smallest (10 x 200nm), and simplest self- replicating microorganism know, and more closely resembles a bacterium rather than a virus. However, because it lacks a cell-well, a resistance to cell-well-active antibiotics is obvious (i.e., penicillin, cephalosporins). This concern for diagnostic, or at least therapeutic accuracy in the early management of community-acquired infections is particularly critical in very young or elderly patients where very little temporal margin of error exists. Until recently, the routine laboratory diagnosis of this infection has been limited to insensitive and/or non-specific assays (i.e., cold agglutinins, complement-fixation, and culture isolation). Species-specific antibodies to surface antigens are now known to exist. They are protective, and are readily detected by ELISA, even in the early stages of the disease. The diagnosis therefore, is best achieved serologically.
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