Immunologic test: Difference between revisions
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Regarding types of substrates being tested: | Regarding types of substrates being tested: | ||
* [[Immunoassay]]s and | * [[Immunoassay]]s and serologic tests (serologic tests include [[agglutination test]]s) use blood samples | ||
* [[Immunohistochemistry]] tests use tissue samples. | * [[Immunohistochemistry]] tests use tissue samples. | ||
Regarding methodology: | Regarding methodology: | ||
* [[Immunoassay]]s [[enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay]] (ELISA) and Western blot, along with the tissue immunohistochemistry [[fluorescent antibody technique]] all test the direct binding of [[antibody]] to [[antigen]]. | * [[Immunoassay]]s such as the [[enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay]] (ELISA) and Western blot, along with the tissue immunohistochemistry [[fluorescent antibody technique]] all test the direct binding of [[antibody]] to [[antigen]]. | ||
* | * Serologic tests such as [[agglutination test]]s (including [[hemagglutination test]]s and [[latex agglutination test]]s) test secondary [[immunoglobulin]] and [[antigen]] interactions. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/>[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 08:38, 8 October 2024
In medicine and immunology, a immunologic test is any test that uses immunologic techniques.[1]
Regarding types of substrates being tested:
- Immunoassays and serologic tests (serologic tests include agglutination tests) use blood samples
- Immunohistochemistry tests use tissue samples.
Regarding methodology:
- Immunoassays such as the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and Western blot, along with the tissue immunohistochemistry fluorescent antibody technique all test the direct binding of antibody to antigen.
- Serologic tests such as agglutination tests (including hemagglutination tests and latex agglutination tests) test secondary immunoglobulin and antigen interactions.
References
- ↑ Anonymous (2024), Immunologic test (English). Medical Subject Headings. U.S. National Library of Medicine.